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              CUR/3/3/3/9 · Deel · 1923-07-19 - 1925-07-20
              Part of Curators and Keepers

              SUMMARY:
              Clippings announce E. G. Boulenger’s promotion to Director of the new aquarium and Joan B. Procter’s appointment as Curator of Reptiles, outlining her background and expertise. Additional coverage describes progress and features planned for the new aquarium.

              CONTENT:
              THE TIMES, THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1923.

              Mr. E. G. Boulenger has been appointed
              Director of the new Aquarium at the Zoo,
              and Miss Joan B. Procter has been appointed
              Curator of Reptiles. (p. 9)

              WOMAN CURATOR OF
              REPTILES.

              APPOINTMENTS AT THE
              ZOO.

              Mr. E. G. Boulenger, at present Curator of
              Reptiles at the Zoological Gardens, has been
              appointed Director of the new Aquarium.
              He will continue to exercise a general super-
              vision over the reptiles, but for some time he
              has been very fully occupied with superintend-
              ing the construction of the aquarium, and
              when the tanks are ready for occupation it is
              anticipated that his time will be almost com-
              pletely engaged by his new duties. Mr.
              Boulenger is a son of Dr. G. A. Boulenger,
              F.R.S., for long chief of the Department of
              Reptiles, Batrachians, and Fishes at the
              British Museum of Natural History. Since
              Mr. Boulenger has been Curator at the Zoo
              the reptile-house has been greatly improved,
              and the collection made one of the finest in
              the world. During the war he served in
              France with the balloons.

              Miss Joan B. Procter, F.Z.S., F.L.S., has
              been appointed Curator of Reptiles, and will
              assume her duties in late autumn. She was
              educated at St. Paul's School for Girls, and
              since 1916 has worked in the Reptile Depart-
              ment at the British Museum, first as voluntary
              assistant to Dr. Boulenger, and, since his
              retirement, in charge. She is the author of a
              large number of papers on the anatomy,
              classification, and habits of reptiles and
              batrachians, and for many years has kept a
              private collection of living snakes and batra-
              chians. At present Miss Procter is still carry-
              ing on the work of the Reptile Department
              at the Museum, but is also engaged in design-
              ing the rockwork for the aquarium tanks at
              the Zoo.

              Cutting from the Hull Daily Mail
              Address of Publication.
              Issue dated. 20.7.25

              Miss Joan Procter, F.Z.S., F.L.S., an Englishwoman
              of 25, has been appointed curator
              of reptiles at the Zoo. She will have com-
              plete charge of dozens of venomous cobras,
              deadly pythons, boa constrictors, alligators,
              and crocodiles. Miss Procter, unknown to the
              world at large, is famous among zoologists as
              one of the greatest snake experts of the day.

              THE EVENING STANDARD.

              ZOO AQUARIUM
              PROGRESS.

              NEW CURATOR ON WONDERS OF
              COMING ATTRACTIONS.

              £50,000 COST.

              HOW LONDONERS WILL SEE
              SEALS UNDER WATER.

              Mr. E. G. Boulenger, the curator of rep-
              tiles at the Zoological Gardens, who has
              been appointed director of the new aquarium
              which is expected to be completed at the
              end of the year, gave some interesting de-
              tails in an interview to-day of the progress
              of the work.

              Mr. Boulenger is a son of Dr. G. A.
              Boulenger, F.R.S., formerly chief of the de-
              partment of reptiles and fishes at the British
              Museum of Natural History, South Kensing-
              ton.

              One of the Finest in the World.

              "We began building the aquarium," he said,
              "at the beginning of December. When it is
              finished—we hope before the end of the year—
              the aquarium should be one of the finest in
              the world. It is being built under Mappin Ter-
              races, and the tanks have been supervised by
              myself and Miss Joan Procter, who has just
              been appointed Curator of Reptiles, and is
              taking over my duties in the autumn.

              "The aquarium will be for fresh water and
              marine animals, and the tanks will be faced
              with plate glass 1¼ inches thick. This glass is
              very expensive, and is a big item in the total
              cost of £50,000.

              "We are getting our sea-water from the Bay
              of Biscay, and it will be brought in the ballast
              tanks of large vessels to the docks and trans-
              ferred there to barges, which will bring it up
              along the Regent's Canal to the Zoo. It will be
              piped from the barges into the tanks by means
              of long fire hoses.

              "Mr. Compton Mackenzie has given us a
              quantity of shell sand from the Island of Herm
              which he owns for some of the tank floors. This
              shell sand is remarkable, for every grain is a
              tiny shell.

              Open Trout Pool.

              "We will have an elaborate system of reser-
              voirs, filtering arrangements, and plant for
              heating, lighting, and ventilating, and the
              aquarium, which will be 400ft. long, will be
              divided into three parts.

              "The fresh-water hall will have 25 tanks, the
              marine hall 20, and the tropical hall 40. We
              will have an open trout pool, a big octagonal
              tank for marine turtle, and a tank for seals
              under water.

              "We will have a wonderful collection of
              tropical fish brilliantly coloured and equal to the
              finest in the world.

              "Not even the New York Aquarium will sur-
              pass it in the beauty of its contents."

              The new aquarium, when it is completed, will
              probably prove one of the biggest attractions at
              Regent's Park.

              Miss Procter, the new Curator of Reptiles,
              was educated at St. Paul's School for Girls,
              and since 1916 has worked in the Reptile De-
              partment at the British Museum, first as volun-
              tary assistant to Dr. Boulenger.