Showing 1736 results

Archival description
Browley, M B
SEC/2/1/11 · Item · c.1833
Part of ZSL Secretaries

Letter from M B Browley to ask advice and assistance as to the most advisable course in the present state of affairs

Brown, Arthur E
SEC/7/2/37 · File · 1880
Part of ZSL Secretaries

Letters from Arthur E Brown of the Zoological Society of Philadelphia, to Philip Lutley Sclater regarding the birth of an African elephant

Brown, H B
SEC/11/1/8 · File · 1944
Part of ZSL Secretaries

Correspondence between Sheffield Airey Neave and H B Brown of Taronga Zoological Park Trust regarding a conference concerning post-war problems for zoological gardens

SEC/11/1/9 · File · 1949
Part of ZSL Secretaries

Correspondence between Brown, Jenkinson & Co Limited and Sheffield Airey Neave regarding a shipment of animals to be returned to Hamburg Zoo by the Zoological Society of London

Brown, Robert
SEC/7/2/38 · Item · 1871
Part of ZSL Secretaries

Letter from Robert Brown to Philip Lutley Sclater regarding the best method of destroying the poisonous serpent Craspedocephalus lanceolatus in Santa Lucia

Brown, William
SEC/7/2/39 · Item · 1872
Part of ZSL Secretaries

Letter from William Brown to Philip Lutley Sclater regarding the price of a koala or native bear, and a request for reptiles from Queensland

Browning, James
SEC/2/1/12 · File · 1834
Part of ZSL Secretaries

Letter from James Browning giving thanks for friendly advice to withdraw a motion. He says that he had forgotten the invaluable services of Mr Vigors to the Zoological Society of London. He invites Edward Turner Bennett to a 10 acre estate for a specifically defined period. Also a ticket for admittance to the Garden of the Horticultural Society

SEC/6/12 · File · 1854
Part of ZSL Secretaries

Letters from Sir Frederick William Adolphus Bruce to David William Mitchell regarding the gift of a female hippopotamus from Egypt for the Zoological Society of London

Bruce, William Spiers
SEC/7/2/41 · Item · 1893
Part of ZSL Secretaries

Letter from William Spiers Bruce to Philip Lutley Sclater regarding his intention of visiting the Antarctic and requesting the support of the learned societies, and an offer to secure Antarctic fauna for the Zoological Society of London