The house that Wallace built seeks new owner

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The house built by Alfred Russel Wallace after he returned from his exotic travels is about to come on the market.

Wallace — who came up with the concept of evolution by natural selection independently of Charles Darwin and prompted Darwin to publish his own work — had the house built in 1872 in Grays, UK, according to the website outlining the sale. Wallace’s pioneering continued in this construction. The house, which he named The Dell because it sat in a pit, was one of the first buildings in the United Kingdom made out of moulded concrete. The house is situated on the north of the Thames, east of London.

According to the Wallace Fund, which has a short history of the house online, the naturalist lived in the house for only about four years.

This year marks 100 years since the death of Wallace and a surge in interest in a man often consigned by history to a Darwinian footnote. In Nature recently, Harvard biologist Andrew Berry wrote: “Alfred Russel Wallace is too often remembered as little more than Charles Darwin’s goad… Sidekick status does Wallace an injustice. He was a visionary scientist in his own right, a daring explorer and a passionate socialist.”

In a reappraisal of Wallace’s book The Malay Archipelago in Nature, the American nature writer David Quammen calls him “arguably the greatest field biologist of the nineteenth century”. Wallace’s letters were made available online earlier this year.

If you fancy owning his old house, estate agents Stanley Hicks & Son suggest a guide price of £1.5 million.

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