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Leiper, Robert Thomson
Persoon · 1881-1969

Robert Thomson Leiper was born in 1881in Kilmarnock, Scotland. He studied medicine at the University of Glasgow. His main focus of study was helminthology - the study of parasitic flatworms. He founded the Journal of Helminthology in 1923. He was the first professor of helminthology at the University of London and director of these studies at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine - a post he held from 1905 until his retirement in 1947.

Persoon · 1798-1864

William Charles Linnaeus Martin was an English naturalist. He was the son of English naturalist and palaeontologist William Martin (1767-1810), who named him after the taxonomist Carl Linnaeus. Martin was the curator of the ZSL Museum from 1830-1839. After this he was a prolific natural history writer, authoring many books and articles. Forty-five of his papers appear in the Proceedings of the Zoological Society.

Miller, Alexander
Persoon · fl 1834-1836

Member of London Zoo staff, probably Head Keeper

Bartlett, Clarence
Persoon · c1848-1903)

Superintendent of the Gardens 1897-1903

Vigors, Nicholas Aylward
Persoon · 1785-1840

Vigors was born at Old Leighlin, County Carlow, Ireland. He was educated at Trinity College, Oxford. He served in the army during the Peninsular War from 1809-1811. He then returned to Oxford, graduating in 1815. He practiced as a barrister and became a Doctor of Civil Law in 1832.

He was co-founder of the Zoological Society of London in 1826, and its first Secretary until 1833. In 1833 he founded what became the Royal Entomological Society of London. He was a fellow of the Linnean Society and the Royal Society. He was the author of 40 papers, mostly on ornithology. He described 110 species of birds. He provided the text for John Gould's 'A Century of Birds from the Himalaya Mountains' (1830-1832). One bird that he described was Sabine's Snipe. Vigors lent a skin for later editions of Thomas Bewick's 'History of British Birds'.

Vigors succeeded to his father's estate in 1828. He was MP for the borough of Carlow from 1832 until 1835. He briefly represented the constituency of County Carlow in 1835. Vigors won a by-election in 1837 and retained the seat until his death.

Bennett, Edward Turner
Persoon · 1799-1836

Bennett was an English Zoologist and writer. He was the elder brother of the botanist John Joseph Bennett. He was born at Hackney and practiced as a surgeon, but his chief pursuit was always zoology. In 1822 he attempted to establish an entomological society, which later became a zoological society in connection with the Linnean Society. This in turn became the starting point of the Zoological Society of London, of which Bennett was Secretary from 1831-1836.

His works included 'The Tower Menagerie' (1829) and 'The Gardens and Menagerie of the Zoological Society (1831). He also wrote, in conjunction with G. T. Lay, the section of Fishes in the 'Zoology of Beechey's Voyage' (1839). In 1835 he described a new species of African crocodile, Mecistops leptorhynchus, the validity of which was confirmed in 2018.

Mitchell, David William
Persoon · 1813-1859

Mitchell was born in Chalfont St. Peter, Buckinghamshire. He graduated from Christ Church, Oxford in 1836.

He illustrated George Robert Gray's 'Genera of Birds', but finding himself too busy with his work for the Zoological Society of London, he employed the German illustrator Joseph Wolf as his assistant on the project.

Mitchell was elected into the Linnean Society in November 1843. He was the first paid secretary of the Zoological Society of London, taking up the post between 10th February 1847 and 6th April 1859, instigating the construction of the first public marine aquarium in the Zoological Gardens, which opened on 22nd May 1853. He was credited with rescuing the zoo financially by publishing attractive images of a few 'star' animals, thus greatly increasing the number of visitors in the late 1840s. He was also a collector and dealer in skins and eggs.

He resigned his post as Secretary of the Zoological Society of London on 6th April 1859, and he became the Aquarium Director of the Jardin d'Acclimatation in Paris, but died on 1st November 1859 after his shot himself only months after taking up the position.

He married Prudence Philips Willes, daughter of Rev Edward Willes of Walcot, near Bath on 30th October 1837.