Royal College of Science

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  • Former higher education institution located in South Kensington; it was a constituent college of Imperial College London from 1907 until it was wholly absorbed by Imperial in 2002.

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            1 Archival description results for Royal College of Science

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            CUR/3/3/3/14 · Part · 1929-07-19 - 1925-09-03
            Part of Curators and Keepers

            SUMMARY:
            Press cuttings report Miss Joan B. Procter’s appointment as Curator of Reptiles at the London Zoo, outlining her background at the British Museum and work on the new aquarium. Another clipping notes related staff changes, including Miss Cheeseman’s temporary replacement during a South Pacific expedition.

            CONTENT:
            For
            DURRANT'S PRESS CUTTINGS
            St. Andrew's House, 32 to 34 Holborn Viaduct
            and 3 St. Andrew Street Holborn Circus, E.C. 1
            TELEPHONE: CITY 4963.

            Pall Mall Gazette and Globe
            25 Tudor Street, E.C.4.

            Cutting from issue dated. 19 JUL 1929

            CURATOR OF REPTILES.

            WOMAN'S APPOINTMENT AT
            THE ZOO.

            Miss Joan B. Procter, F.Z.S.,
            F.L.S., has been appointed Curator
            of Reptiles at the Zoo, and will as-
            sume 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 re-
            tirement, in charge.
            She is the author of a large num-
            ber of papers on the anatomy, classi-
            fication, and habits of reptiles and
            batrachians, and for many years
            (says the "Times") has kept a
            private collection of living snakes and
            batrachians.
            At present Miss Procter is still car-
            rying on the work of the Reptile De-
            partment at the Museum, but is also
            engaged in designing the rockwork
            for the aquarium tanks at the Zoo.

            25 AUG 1923

            An English girl of twenty-five has been
            appointed curator of reptiles at the London
            Zoo. When one considers how badly
            woman managed the first serpent in history,
            the appointment seems a little surprising.
            Cutting from the People
            Address of Publication
            Issue dated. 22. 7. 23

            WOMAN'S SNAKE PETS.

            HANDLED REPTILES FROM
            CHILDHOOD.

            A woman has been appointed curator
            of reptiles at the Zoo and will, from
            November next, be responsible for
            those creeping and crawling things that
            are so fascinating and attractive—be-
            hind the thick glass. She is Miss Joan
            B. Procter, F.Z.S., F.L.S., and is recog-
            nised among scientists as one of the
            foremost authorities on snakes.
            As curator she will have in her care
            deadly cobras, pythons and boa con-
            strictors, alligators and crocodiles.
            Miss Procter is taking the place of
            Mr. F. G. Boulenger, who becomes the
            director of the new aquarium.
            Seen at the Zoo, Miss Procter was
            too busy, she said, and seemed too
            retiring and diffident to discuss off-
            hand her special interests. She was
            consulting over the rockwork of the
            new aquarium now being built under
            the Mappin Terraces at the Zoo.
            Her grandfather was a noted au-
            thority on insects, so that her own in-
            terest in reptiles is probably heredi-
            tary.
            At her home in South Kensington she
            has quite an extensive collection of
            living creatures. At ten years of age
            she had a pet snake, and has had
            presents of six Brazilian snakes and a
            crocodile.
            When only nineteen she read a paper
            before the Zoological Society, and was
            made a Fellow the next year.
            Cutting from the Yorkshire Post
            Address of Publication Leeds
            Issue dated. 3-9-25

            Zoo's Lady Curators.

            In view of her appointment on the per-
            sonnel of the Scientific Expeditionary Re-
            search Association's coming expedition to
            the South Pacific, Miss Cheeseman, who
            in 1917 became curator of insects in the
            London Zoo under Professor Maxwell
            Lefroy, will be temporarily withdrawn from
            that position, and replaced by Mr. L. C.
            Bushby, of the Royal College of Science.
            Miss Cheeseman enjoys the distinction of
            having been the first lady curator
            appointed by the Zoological Society, and
            during her tenure of the post she has
            created almost a revolution in the beauti-
            ful insect house presented some years ago
            by the late Sir William Caird. The build-
            ing took the place of a much older one
            which for many years had been specially
            associated with insect life, and which stood
            close to the south entrance to the Gardens.
            The Society has also quite recently
            appointed a lady curator of reptiles, in the
            person of Miss Joan Procter, F.Z.S.,
            F.L.S., who for several years has worked
            in the reptile department of the British
            Museum as voluntary assistant to Dr.
            Boulenger, and latterly in full charge.
            She is expected to take over her new duties
            in the course of the coming autumn.