In 1835, Whitby was travelling in Italy when she encountered stories of an English businessman who had made substantial profits from silkworms on a
mulberry plantation near Milan. She resolved to try the same project in England, hoping that as well as turning a profit it would be able to reintroduce the industry to the country and provide employment for poor women. Early attempts had been made to introduce mulberries and silkworms by
James I of England in the early seventeenth century, but while the trees had survived the silkworms had not thrived. It took her a decade to develop economically viable silk production – the major problem proved to be
processing the raw silk, rather than rearing the silkworms – but she persevered, and in 1844 produced twenty yards of
damask, which she presented to
Queen Victoria. ==Work with Darwin==