Henslow graduated in 1818. He already had a passion for
natural history from his childhood, which largely influenced his career, and he accompanied
Sedgwick in 1819 on a tour in the
Isle of Wight where he learned his first lessons in geology. He also studied
chemistry under Professor
James Cumming and
mineralogy under
Edward Clarke. In the autumn of 1819 he made valuable observations on the geology of the
Isle of Man (Trans. Geol. Soc., 1821) and in 1820 and 1821 he investigated the geology of parts of
Anglesey, the results being printed in the first volume of the Transactions of the
Cambridge Philosophical Society (1822). The Philosophical Society was founded in November 1819 by a group at Cambridge with Professors
Farish,
Lee, and Sedgwick and Henslow (at that time not yet a professor). The idea and initial impetus for the society originated from Sedgwick and Henslow. Meanwhile, Henslow had studied mineralogy with considerable zeal, so that on the death of Clarke he was in 1822 appointed professor of mineralogy in the University of Cambridge. Two years later he took holy orders. Botany, however, had claimed much of his attention, and to this science he became more and more attached, so that he gladly resigned the chair of mineralogy in 1827, two years after becoming professor of botany. As a teacher both in the classroom and in the field he was eminently successful. He was a correspondent of
John James Audubon who in 1829 named
Henslow's sparrow (
Centronyx henslowii) after him. From 1821 Henslow had begun organising a
herbarium of British flora, supplementing his own collecting with a network which expanded over time to include his friends and family, and the botanists
William Jackson Hooker and
John Hutton Balfour, as well as about 30 of his students. As a mineralogist he had used
Haüy's laws of crystallography to analyse complex crystals as transformations of "the primitive form of the species" of crystal, and when he moved to botany in 1825 he sought similarly precise laws to group plant varieties into species, often including as varieties plants that respected
taxonomists had ranked as separate species. He followed the understanding of the time that species were fixed as created but could vary within limits, and hoped to analyse these limits of variation. By a method he called "collation", Henslow prepared sheets with several plant specimens, each labelled with the collector, date and place of collection, comparing the specimens to show the variation within the species. His
A Catalogue of British Plants was first published in October 1829, and became a set book for his lecture course. Henslow is remembered as friend and mentor to his pupil
Charles Darwin, and for inspiring him with a passion for natural history. The two met in 1828. Earlier that year, Darwin joined the course and along with other students helped to collect plants of Cambridgeshire. Henslow became his tutor, and it was not long before he marked out Darwin as a promising student. In 1830 Henslow experimented on varying the conditions of garden grown wild plants to produce various forms of the plant. In 1835 Henslow published
Principles of Descriptive and Physiological Botany as a textbook based on this lecture course. In the summer of 1831 Henslow was offered a place as naturalist to sail aboard the survey ship
HMS Beagle on a
two-year voyage to survey
South America, but his wife dissuaded him from accepting. Seeing a perfect opportunity for his protégé, Henslow wrote to the ship's captain
Robert Fitzroy telling him that Darwin was the ideal man to join the expedition team. During the voyage, Darwin corresponded with Henslow, and collected plants with him in mind. In particular, when first arriving at the
Galápagos Islands Darwin noted "I certainly recognize S America in Ornithology, would a botanist?", and went on to collect plant specimens carefully labelled by island and date. He also labelled the
mockingbirds he caught, and initially thought these were varieties but while arranging these bird specimens on the last lap of the voyage he began wondering if they could be species, a possibility which would "undermine the stability of Species". Henslow's teaching continued to influence Darwin's work on evolution. Besides Darwin, other famous students of Henslow included
Miles Joseph Berkeley,
Cardale Babington,
Leonard Jenyns,
Richard Lowe, and
William Miller. == A country clergyman ==