Joshua Alder


Joshua Alder was a British cheesemonger and amateur zoologist and malacologist. As such, he specialized in the Tunicata, and in gastropods.
He was a member of the Natural History Society of Northumberland and Durham, and an early member of the Literary and Philosophical Society, alongside Joseph Swan and Robert Stephenson. He corresponded with Charles Darwin.
His drawings are in the collections of the Great North Museum and the British Museum.

Ravensworth Terrace

From 1841 to 1857 Alder was a tenant at 5 Ravensworth Terrace in the Summerhill area of Newcastle upon Tyne, which he shared with his sister Mary, a woman of independent means, and their two female servants.
During this time, he ran a cheese shop in The Side, a street in central Newcastle. He sold that business and became a shareholder in the Northumberland District Bank, and a gentleman of leisure. A financial crash in 1857 led to the collapse of the bank, and Alder faced ruin. He and Mary were forced to leave Ravensworth Terrace, moving to a smaller house, still extant, in nearby Summerhill Terrace, where he was supported by his sister. In 1863 he wrote to his co-author Albany Hancock of his relief at being awarded a pension of £70 from the civil list by Lord Palmerston at the behest of his scientific colleagues, allowing him to resume his research.
An obituary noted that he was "everywhere accompanied" by his sister, who "assisted him in his studies and was, in short, essential to his life and health".
Alder is profiled in the first episode of the second series of A House Through Time, first shown in April 2019. As a result of research conducted for the programme, a plaque commemorating Alder was unveiled there on 26 September 2018 by presenter David Olusoga and the Lord Mayor of Newcastle, David Down. The house has been Grade II listed since June 1976.

Taxa described

Alder discovered over 100 marine species, new to science.
Names or synonyms of tunicates described by Alder include:
Gastropod taxa described by Alder include: