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CUR/3/3/3/40 · Part · 1923-09-10
Part of Curators and Keepers

SUMMARY:
A letter dated 10 September 1923 informs Pathé Frères Cinema Ltd. that Miss Procter cannot comply with their request to film her with her snakes. It is signed by C.J.B. from the Department of Zoology (Reptiles).

CONTENT:
T/RE. PICTORIAL DEPT.

Pathé Frères Cinema Ltd.
103-109, Wardour Street,
W.1.- 10.9.23.

Dear Sir,

Miss Procter instructs me to say that
she is unable to comply with your request to film her
with her snakes.

Yours faithfully,

C.J.B.

Dept. Zoology (Reptiles).

J.B.P/C.J.B.

CUR/3/3/3/34 · Part · 1923-09-04 - 1923-10-06
Part of Curators and Keepers

SUMMARY:
Press cuttings profile Miss Joan Procter/Proctor as Curator of Reptiles at the Zoological Gardens of London, noting her expertise, refusal of a New York offer, and her design work for the new aquarium. Items also mention E. G. Boulenger’s appointment to direct the aquarium and related details.

CONTENT:
Snake Expert.
THE AMERICAN
AUG. 1923

Photo by Kadel & Herbert.
MISS JOAN PROCTOR.
Not an ordinary snake charmer
is Miss Proctor, F. Z. S. F. L. S.,
but Curator of Reptiles at the
Zoological Gardens of London.
She is an English girl, twenty-five
years of age, and regarded the
greatest authority on snakes in
the world. She recently refused
an offer from the New York
Zoological Society.

Le Matin (Paris)

  1. Aug.

ÉCHOS ET PROPOS

L'ECOLE DE LA TENTATION. —
C'est une femme, une jeune fille même,
la frêle, délicate et gracieuse miss Procter qui
est chargée, au jardin zoologique de Londres,
de la section... des serpents.

Et je constate que les serpents et les fem-
mes ont décidément des affinités dont la pru-
dence masculine devrait commencer sérieuse-
ment à prendre ombrage.

Chacun connaît l'entente extrêmement cor-
diale qui existait entre notre mère Eve et l'an-
cêtre des serpents, et chacun sait aussi ce qui
en est résulté.

Seulement, voilà, du temps de notre mère
Eve, il y avait un paradis à perdre.
Tandis que maintenant...
Rosine

Cutting from the Nottingham Express
Address of Publication.
Issue dated

    1. 23

HER REPTILIAN FAMILY.

The second of the lady curators appointed by
the Zoological Society, Miss Joan Procter, will
take over her duties in charge of the reptiles at
Regent's Park during the autumn. Miss Procter
has plenty of practical experience of these strange
pets, for, apart from work which she has fulfilled
in the reptile department of the museum at South
Kensington, she has for several years kept a private
collection of live snakes and batrachians. She has
designed the whole of the rockwork for the new
aquarium at the Zoo.

Extract from
THE ENGLISHMAN
CALCUTTA.
Date
10 AUG 1929

WOMAN CURATOR OF
REPTILES

APPOINTMENTS AT THE LONDON
ZOO

Mr. E. G. Boulenger, at present
Curator of Reptiles at the Zoological
Gardens, London, 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 superintending the construction of
the aquarium, and when the tanks are
ready for occupation it is anticipated
that his time will be almost completely
engaged by his new duties. Mr. Boulen-
ger 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 Department 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 batrachians. At
present Miss Procter is still carrying on
the work of the Reptile Department at
the Museum, but is also engaged in de-
signing the rockwork for the aquarium
tanks at the Zoo.

MAKING THE ZOO'S NEW AQUARIUM. Finishing one of the two hundred tanks
which are to form the new aquarium under the Mappin Terraces at the Zoo. Some of
the tanks will hold thirty tons of water. (Daily Mirror photograph.)
OCTOBER 6, 1923

CUR/3/3/3/43 · Part · 1923-08-05
Part of Curators and Keepers

SUMMARY:
An excerpt notes Miss Procter’s plans for arranging submarine scenes, followed by 'A City-Builder' describing honours awarded to Sir Charles Wilson of Leeds, with mentions of ceremonies and gifts associated with the city and university. Figures referenced include Eva Bland, E. F. L. Wood, Lord Halifax, Professor Gilbert Murray, and Sir Michael Sadler, with locations such as the Town Hall of Leeds, Westminster, and Temple Newsam.

CONTENT:
THE
WORLD'S
WORK
SEPTEMBER 1923
326 MEN AND WOMEN

and without their original occupants. In the
arrangement of these submarine scenes Miss
Procter will find ample scope for combining
artistic feminine taste with scientific knowledge.

Eva Bland.

A CITY-BUILDER

Many honours of high distinction have
recently been awarded to Sir Charles Wilson,
J.P., F.S.A.A., the new Member of Parliament
for Leeds. First, the city to whose welfare
and well-being he has given so many selfless
years made him a Freeman by unanimous
vote of the Council and acclaim of the people,
then the University conferred upon him the
Degree of LL.D., probably the first accountant
to be admitted into this select academic
fellowship. Next, he was granted a Knighthood
in the King's Birthday List, and now
he has been returned to Westminster. The
scene in the Town Hall of Leeds when the
freedom of the city and the University degree
were conferred, impressed me by its beauty
and dignity. I think it is Professor Gilbert
Murray who, translating one of his beloved
Greek authors, gives us the line "The apple
tree, the singing and the gold." The words
perfectly portray a festival of rich delight, of
proud gladness in the heart and colour in the
setting. Truly it was a scene memorable for
its manifold solemnity and significance. It
was the City giving honour to one who has
helped to make it honourable.

Major the Right Hon. E. F. L. Wood,
M.A., M.P., President of the Board of Education,
was associated with the then Alderman
Wilson (a Major, too, if I were to use his
military title) in receiving the highest honours
which it is in the power of City and University
to give. Major Wood, the son of the venerable
Lord Halifax, who was proudly present
at the Ceremony of Conferment, recently
transferred his beautiful home and estate,
Temple Newsam, the Templestowe of Ivanhoe,
to the City of Leeds on generously sacrificial
terms, and as a gift he made over a treasure-
trove of furniture and art. It was Alderman
Wilson who carried the delicately intricate
negotiations to successful issue. Nothing
could have been more appropriate than the
comradeship of these two men in honour on
so eventful and so noble a day.

Through the eloquent lips of Sir Michael
Sadler, the Vice-Chancellor, the University
paid homage to Alderman Wilson's "disinterested
public service." In a choice perora-