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              CUR/3/3/3/13 · Deel · 1923-07-21
              Part of Curators and Keepers

              SUMMARY:
              Newspaper article announcing Miss Joan B. Procter’s appointment as Curator of Reptiles at the London Zoological Gardens, noting her education, museum work, and scientific honors. It highlights other women in similar posts abroad, her research and design of aquarium rockwork, and mentions her reptile pets.

              CONTENT:
              THE MANCHESTER GUARDIAN, SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1923.

              Women in the News

              A CURATOR AT
              THE ZOO

              (FROM A WOMAN CORRESPONDENT.)

              FLEET STREET, FRIDAY.
              Manchester readers will be especially in-
              terested in the fact that Miss Joan B. Procter,
              F.Z.S., F.L.S., has been appointed curator of
              reptiles at the Zoological Gardens in London,
              for Miss Procter is a granddaughter of Mr.
              William Brockbank, of Didsbury, whose
              wonderful gardens were famous more than
              twenty-five years ago. Mr. Brockbank was a
              well-known geologist, and was made a Fellow
              of the Linnean Society at the time of the
              "Daffodil" Conference. A similar honour
              has just been conferred on his granddaughter,
              who has inherited his scientific tastes and his
              interest in geology. It was because of her
              writings and research work in zoology that
              the Linnean Society made her a Fellow.

              She was educated at St. Paul's School for
              Girls at Hammersmith, and it was not long
              after she left school that Miss Procter went to
              work in the reptile department of the Natural
              History Museum at South Kensington, first as a
              voluntary assistant to Dr. Boulenger. Since
              his retirement she has been in charge of the
              department, and she is still carrying on her
              work there. A "Manchester Guardian" repre-
              sentative who went to see Miss Procter at her
              home to-day found her very unwilling to talk
              about herself. Ever since she was a child, she
              said, she had been interested in reptiles and
              batrachia. It is a branch of zoology to which
              much less attention has been paid in England
              than in America and on the Continent. In
              America it is very well worked, and each large
              museum has several people devoting themselves
              to the study of reptiles and nothing else. The
              head of the department at the New York Museum
              was a woman, a Miss Dickerson, who has now
              retired, and in Leyden another woman, Dr. De
              Rooy, holds a similar position. In England
              there are only two specialists, Mr. E. G.
              Boulenger, who is at present curator of rep-
              tiles at the Zoo, and Miss Procter herself.

              HER WORK AT THE ZOO.

              As a curator at the Zoo Miss Procter will
              have charge of the reptile-house and the
              tortoises. She will keep on with the research
              work she has been doing at the Museum, will
              describe new species, and probably work out
              their anatomy. "One is always coming across
              new species," she said. "With some of these
              invertebrate things you get a new species every
              day. It is work of absorbing interest, and one
              never knows what the anatomical research will
              lend to."

              Miss Procter endorsed what a speaker at the
              Surgeon's Conference said the other day of the
              importance to human surgery of research work
              in other forms of animal life. At present Miss
              Procter is engaged on designing the decorative
              rockwork for the new aquarium tanks at the
              Zoo. She makes models of the tanks on a
              scale of two inches to a foot, and the work-
              men carry out her designs. Some of these
              tanks will be as big as a room—the biggest
              will be 30ft. in length. Instead of making
              them all of Portland cement, which would
              have a monotonous effect, the idea is to vary

              them as much as possible—provide a setting
              of natural rock, sometimes of red rock, but
              mostly in shades of grey or yellow. The granite
              boulders for the turtle tank have been brought
              from Cornwall, and the coloured pebbles to
              go with the red marble rocks in another tank
              come from the Channel Islands.
              From his island of Herm Mr. Compton
              McKenzie has sent sacks full of the tiny white
              and coloured shells that lie to a depth of
              three feet on the beaches, and these are to
              show off the navy-blue beauty of the lobsters
              in their tank. In addition to the rockwork Miss
              Procter has to find the appropriate shingles
              and water weeds.

              Miss Procter has her own reptilian pets, given
              to her by collectors from abroad. The boa
              constrictor lives at the Zoo, and when she
              takes up her new post there Miss Procter will
              transfer to the warmer temperature the small
              snakes which at present live at her home. She
              showed some of these to-day to the interviewer.
              The two water snakes from Brazil and the small
              snake, also harmless, from Tanganyika, were
              in a semi-torpid condition, but they writhed
              about in a bunch on her hand, laying their
              flat heads along her arm and shooting out
              their restless tongues. Realising that they
              were harmless, one could understand some-
              thing of their fascination.

              MISS JOAN B. PROCTER,
              F.Z.S., who has been ap-
              pointed Curator of Reptiles
              to the London Zoological
              Gardens.

              The Daily Mail

              JULY 21, 1923.