Museums

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        Museums

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          Museums

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            Museums

              2 Authority record results for Museums

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              Coryndon Museum
              Corporate body · 1930-

              The East Africa and Uganda Natural History Society was founded in 1910-1911 by persons with an interest in nature in British East Africa. In 1911 they established the Natural History Museum and library with an honorary curator. In 1914 they could afford a paid curator. They brought in Arthur Loveridge, a herpetologist, who arrived in March 1914. Loveridge concentrated on collections, with the members volunteering to contribute specimens, labour and funds.

              The next curator was A F J Gedye. Among the new volunteers for the society were Sir Robert Coryndon, Governor of Kenya. At his unexpected death in 1925, Lady Coryndon established the Coryndon Memorial Fund to build a better museum for the society in memory of her husband. The government offered matching funds for public donations and in 1928 construction began.

              The building was ready in 1929. Unfortunately no workrooms or storage space had been provided and therefore the Natural History Society declined to move in. The government then bought the old museum and the society used the money to add three rooms, gave its collections to the museum trustees, but retained the library. Everything was moved to the museum.

              The museum was officially opened on 22 September 1930, as Coryndon Museum. Kenya became independent in 1963. The Coryndon Museum was renamed National Museum in 1964 and was included in a new system, the National Museum of Kenya

              Corporate body · fl 1946

              The University Museum of Zoology is a museum of the University of Cambridge and part of the research community of the Department of Zoology. The museum houses an extensive collection of scientifically important zoological material. Much of the museum's material derives from the great collecting expeditions of the 19th century, which provided the first documentation of the fauna in many parts of the world. The earliest exhibits come from the Harwood anatomical collection which was purchase in 1814. The museum added further collections including birds from Swainson and animals from the Cambridge Philosophical Society, to which Charles Darwin had contributed