Showing 10 results

Authority record
Boxshall, Geoffrey Allan
Person · 1950-

Geoffrey Allan Boxshall is a British zoologist and Merit researcher at the Natural History Museum, working primarily on copepods.

Son of Jack Boxshall a Canadian bank manager and Sybil Boxshall (nee Baker), a civil servant in the procurement department of the Ministry of Defence. He was educated at Churcher's College, Petersfield 1961-1968. He earned a First Class BSc in Zoology in 1971, and a PhD in 1974 from the University of Leeds. In 1994 he became a Fellow of the Royal Society, and in 1998 he was awarded the Crustacean Society's Award for Excellence in Research.

In 1974 he joined the Natural History Museum's Department of Zoology, and joined Life Sciences in 2014. He had been the Secretary of the Zoological Society of London since 2011 and was Vice-President of the Linnean Society Council from 2012-2013.

Person · 1906-1981

Chaplin was a British hereditary peer, an amateur zoologist and musician. He was born in 1906, the son of Eric Chaplin, 2nd Viscount Chaplin, and the Hon Gwladys Wilson, daughter of Charles Wilson, 1st Baron Nunburnholme and Florence Wellesley. He was educated at Radley College.

During 1935 and 1936 he went on a zoological expedition to New Guinea. He was Secretary of the Zoological Society of London between 1952 and 1955, and a member of the council.

Chaplin studied musical composition in Paris with Nadia Boulanger between 1936 and 1939. He served as an Officer in the Royal Air Force from 1940 until 1946, achieving the rank of Flight Lieutenant. He succeeded his father as 3rd Viscount Chaplin in 1949.

He was married in 1933 to Alvilde Bridges, and they had one daughter. The married was dissolved in 1950, and in 1951 he married the Hon Rosemary Lyttelton and they had two daughters. Chaplin died in 1981 in Belgravia, London, when in the absence of male heirs, the viscountcy became extinct.

Person · 1830-1914

Albert Karl Ludwig Gotthilf Günther, also Albert Charles Lewis Gotthilf Günther was a German-born British zoologist, ichthyologist and herpetologist. He is ranked the second-most productive reptile taxonomist (after George Albert Boulenger) with more than 340 reptile species described. He served on the council of the Zoological Society of London for nearly 40 years (1868-1905)

Holdgate, Martin Wyatt, Sir
Person · 1931-

Sir Martin Wyatt Holdgate was born in 1931 and grew up in Blackpool. He was educated as Arnold School. He then attended Cambridge University as an undergraduate at Queens' College, Cambridge from 1949, graduating in 1952 with degrees in zoology and botany and, subsequently, a doctorate in insect physiology.

He taught at Manchester University, Durham University and Cambridge, as well as undertaking expeditions to Tristan da Cunha, south-west Chile and the Antarctic. He was CHief Biologist to the British Antarctic Survey, then research director of the Nature Conservancy Council and, for eighteen years, Chief Scientist and head of research at the Department of the Environment. Subsequently, he was Director General of the International Union for Conservation of Nature. After his retirement he was a member of the Royal Commission on Environment Pollution and served as co-chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Forests, and Secretary of the UN Secretary General's High-Level Board on Sustainable Development. He was President of the Zoological Society of London 1994-2004.

MacBride, Ernest William
Person · 1866-1940

Ernest William MacBride was a marine biologist and one of the last supporters of Lamarckian evolution. He served on the Council of the Zoological Council of London for over thirty years and acted as Vice-President

Maurice, Henry Gascoyne
Person · 1874-1950

Henry Gascoyne Maurice was President of the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea 1920-1938 and President of the Zoological Society of London 1942-1948. He also headed the Fisheries Department of the Ministry of Agriculture from 1912 and was Fisheries Secretary at the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries from 1920 until his retirement in 1938, after which he served on the White Fish Commission from its inception in 1938 until its suspension on the outbreak of the Second World War.

Ogilby, William
Person · 1805-1873

Ogilby was probably born in County Londonderry in 1805, the illegitimate son of Leslie Ogilby. He was educated at a small academy kept by a clergyman in Macclesfield, before proceeding to Belfast Academical Institution and then to Trinity College, Cambridge in 1824. He graduated in 1828 and was called to the Bar by Lincoln's Inn in 1832. In 1827, he examined at Cambridge a living specimen of the species now known as the white-footed palm civet. He examined it again in London in August 1828, by which time he was sufficiently conversant with the organic structure of animals and the principles of taxonomy to recognise the creature as a previously undescribed species which he classified as an intermediate between the common genet and the common cat to which he assigned the name Paradoxurus leucopus. His description and classification of the animals appeared in a paper which was printed in the Zoological Journal of January 1829. The species he identified was included in Coenraad Temminck's 1839 monograph on the genus Paradoxurus.

His arrival in London gave him access to the works of Continental naturalists and to specimens of animals and birds held by the British Museum, the Zoological Society of London, the Linnean society and the East India Company. He became a regular visitor to the museums at Leiden and Paris, and he observed animals locomotion and behaviour at London Zoo, the Surrey Zoological Gardens at Newington, the Menagerie du Jardin des plantes and Paris and in the private collections such as that or Lord Derby.

From 1830 onwards, at meetings of the Zoological Society, he read explanatory papers and delivered commentaries on specimens donated to the Society's museum. Some forty of his reports were printed wither in full or abstract form are in the Society's Transactions and Proceedings during the years to 1841, describing and classifying new examples of mammals and birds from Australia, the Americas and India. In the same period he also read similar papers to the Linnaen Society and commented on fossil specimens to the Geological Society. Publication of his classifications established and named the several genera Cynictis (1833), Madoqua (1836), Pseudocheirus (1837), Chaeropus and Conilurus (1838), and placed many new species within previously established genera.

He chaired meeting of the Zoological Society of London from 1836, and by 1838 was not only one of its Fellows, but also a Fellow of the Linnean, Geological and Royal Astronomical Societies. In 1839 he was elected to the Council of the Zoological Society along with Charles Darwin, with Ogilby becoming the Society's Secretary shortly afterwards. In this latter capacity he conducted the Society's correspondence, controlled and catalogued its museum, recorded the animals in the zoological gardens and made recommendations for their purchase.

After his appointment as Secretary his contribution of scholarly papers and commentaries to the Zoological Society of London meetings declined. He last named a species (Cercopithecus tantalus - the Tantalus Monkey) in April 1841, and his final classification submission was made in January 1843. He continued as Secretary of the Society until resigning in 1847. He had been unremunerated in the post and was succeeded by a salaried official.

Ogilby inherited his father's Donagheady estate in 1845 just as the Great Famine was beginning to devastate Ireland. In December of the following year he tendered his resignation as Secretary of the Zoological Society, explaining that circumstances required his presence on the estate. He was elected a member of the Royal Irish Academy in 1849 and of the Natural History Society of Dublin in 1862. He was commissioned a captain in the Royal Tyrone Militia in 1851, served as High Sheriff of Country Tyrone in 1852, was a county magistrate by 1854 and appointed a Deputy Lieutenant in 1863.

In 1830 he married Matilda Doria, a daughter of Niccolo Doria, Marquese di Spineto. In 1836 Ogilby named a species of antelope (Antilope doria) in his wife's honour. She died in 1849. He later married Adelaide Douglas, the daughter of the local rector of Donagheady. They had four sons and five daughters. He died at 12 Earlsfort Terrace, Dublin, on 1st September 1873.

Pam, Albert
Person · 1875-1955

Treasurer of the Zoological Society of London 1932-1945. He had been a Fellow since 1893, and a member of the Council almost continuously since 1907. In recognition of his many generous gifts of animals, he had been awarded the Society's Silver Medal in 1914. He was a banker and a member of J Henry Schroeder & Co

Petty-Fitzmaurice, Henry
Person · 1780-1863

Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice, 3rd Marquess of Lansdowne, known as Lord Henry Petty from 1784-1809. He was the son of Prime Minister William Petty, 1st Marquess of Lansdowne (known as the Earl of Shelburne) by his second marriage to Lady Louisa, daughter of John FitzPatrick, 1st Earl of Upper Ossory. He was educated at Westminster School, the University of Edinburgh and Trinity College, Cambridge. He was a British Statesman and served as Home Secretary, Chancellor of the Exchequer and was three times Lord President of the Council.

He was President of the Zoological Society of London 1827-1831.

Sclater, Philip Lutley
Person · 1829-1913

Sclater was born at Tangier Park, Wootton St Lawrence, Hampshire, where his father William Lutley Sclater had a country house. George Sclater-Booth, 1st Baron Basing was his elder brother. Philip grew up at Hoddington House where he took an early interest in birds. He was educated in school at Twyford, Winchester College and Corpus Christi, Oxford, where he studied scientific ornithology. In 1851 he began to study law and was admitted as a Fellow of Corpus Christi College. In 1856 he travelled to America and visited Lake Superior and the upper St. Croix River. Sclater wrote about this in his 'Illustrated Travels'. In Philadelphia he met Spencer Baird, John Cassin and Joseph Leidy at the Academy of Natural Sciences. After returning to England, he practiced law for several years and attended meetings of the Zoological Society of London.

In 1858 Sclater published a paper in the Proceedings of the Linnean Society, setting up six zoological regions which he called the Palaeartic, Aethiopina, Indian, Australasian, Neartic and Neotropical, which are still in use. He also developed the theory of Lemuria during 1864 to explain zoological coincidences relating to Madagascar to India.

He was Secretary of the Zoological Society of London for 42 years, from 1860-1902. He was briefly succeeded by his son, before the Council of the Society made a long-term appointment.

In 1874 he became private secretary to his brother George Sclater-Booth, MP. In 1875 he became President of the Biological Section of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, where he joined in 18447 as a member. He was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society in 1873.

Sclater was the founder and editor of 'The Ibis', the journal of the British Ornithologists' Union. His office at 11 Hanover Square became a meeting place for all naturalists in London.

His collection of birds grew to nine thousand and he transferred them to the British Museum in 1886. At around the same time the museum was augmented by the collections of Gould, Salvin and Godman, Hume and others to become the largest in the world.

Among Sclater's books were 'Exotic Ornithology' (1866-1869), 'Nomenclator Avium' (1873), 'Argentine Ornithology' (1888-1889) and 'The Book of Antelopes' (1894-1900).

In June 1901 he received an honorary doctorate of Science from the University of Oxford.

In 1862 he married Jane Eliza Hunter Blair and they had one daughter and four sons. Their eldest son, William Lutley Sclater was also an ornithologist. Philip Sclater is buried in Odiham Cemetery.