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              CUR/3/3/3/36 · Part · 1923-09-02 - 1923-09-04
              Part of Curators and Keepers

              SUMMARY:
              Multiple newspaper clippings from early September 1923 report Miss Joan Proctor’s appointment as Curator of Reptiles at the London Zoo/London Zoological Gardens, noting her prior work with reptiles and aquarium rockwork design. One clipping discusses Miss Cheesman’s temporary withdrawal from the insect curator post for a South Pacific expedition and mentions related figures and institutions.

              CONTENT:
              SEPTEMBER, 1923
              THE CHURCH MILITANT

              Miss Joan Proctor, F.L.S., F.Z.S., has been appointed
              Curator of the Reptiles at the Zoo, in which department she
              has been working since 1916.

              THE NEWS OF THE WORLD SEPT. 2. 1923.

              THE ZOO LADY CURATOR OF REPTILES.
              Miss Joan B. Proctor, who has been appointed Curator of Reptiles at the London Zoo. She
              is seen wearing one of her charges as a necklet.

              Cutting from the Worcester Daily Times
              Address of Publication
              Issue dated 4.9.23

              In view of her appointment on the personnel
              of the Scientific Expeditionary Research As-
              sociation's coming expedition to the South
              Pacific, Miss Cheesman, who in 1917 became
              curator of insects in the London Zoo under
              Professor Maxwell Lefroy, will be temporarily
              withdrawn from that position. Miss Chees-
              man 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 Society has
              also quite recently appointed a lady curator of
              reptiles, in the person of Miss Jean Proctor,
              F.Z.S., F.L.S., who for several years she
              worked in the reptile department of the Brit-
              ish Museum as voluntary assistant to Dr. Bou-
              lenger, and latterly in full charge. It was
              curious that the only lady curators who
              specialise in creepy-crawly forms of life.

              Canadian
              Lepto
              Bosses Snakes
              CANADIAN

              Miss Joan Proctor, an English girl
              of 25, has just been appointed curator
              of reptiles at the London Zoological
              Gardens. She is one of the best
              known experts on snakes in the
              world.

              Cutting from the Liverpool Courier
              Address of Publication
              Issue dated 4.9.23

              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.

              CUR/3/3/3/9 · Part · 1923-07-19 - 1925-07-20
              Part of Curators and Keepers

              SUMMARY:
              Clippings announce E. G. Boulenger’s promotion to Director of the new aquarium and Joan B. Procter’s appointment as Curator of Reptiles, outlining her background and expertise. Additional coverage describes progress and features planned for the new aquarium.

              CONTENT:
              THE TIMES, THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1923.

              Mr. E. G. Boulenger has been appointed
              Director of the new Aquarium at the Zoo,
              and Miss Joan B. Procter has been appointed
              Curator of Reptiles. (p. 9)

              WOMAN CURATOR OF
              REPTILES.

              APPOINTMENTS AT THE
              ZOO.

              Mr. E. G. Boulenger, at present Curator of
              Reptiles at the Zoological Gardens, 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 superintend-
              ing the construction of the aquarium, and
              when the tanks are ready for occupation it is
              anticipated that his time will be almost com-
              pletely engaged by his new duties. Mr.
              Boulenger 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 Depart-
              ment 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 batra-
              chians. At present Miss Procter is still carry-
              ing on the work of the Reptile Department
              at the Museum, but is also engaged in design-
              ing the rockwork for the aquarium tanks at
              the Zoo.

              Cutting from the Hull Daily Mail
              Address of Publication.
              Issue dated. 20.7.25

              Miss Joan Procter, F.Z.S., F.L.S., an Englishwoman
              of 25, has been appointed curator
              of reptiles at the Zoo. She will have com-
              plete charge of dozens of venomous cobras,
              deadly pythons, boa constrictors, alligators,
              and crocodiles. Miss Procter, unknown to the
              world at large, is famous among zoologists as
              one of the greatest snake experts of the day.

              THE EVENING STANDARD.

              ZOO AQUARIUM
              PROGRESS.

              NEW CURATOR ON WONDERS OF
              COMING ATTRACTIONS.

              £50,000 COST.

              HOW LONDONERS WILL SEE
              SEALS UNDER WATER.

              Mr. E. G. Boulenger, the curator of rep-
              tiles at the Zoological Gardens, who has
              been appointed director of the new aquarium
              which is expected to be completed at the
              end of the year, gave some interesting de-
              tails in an interview to-day of the progress
              of the work.

              Mr. Boulenger is a son of Dr. G. A.
              Boulenger, F.R.S., formerly chief of the de-
              partment of reptiles and fishes at the British
              Museum of Natural History, South Kensing-
              ton.

              One of the Finest in the World.

              "We began building the aquarium," he said,
              "at the beginning of December. When it is
              finished—we hope before the end of the year—
              the aquarium should be one of the finest in
              the world. It is being built under Mappin Ter-
              races, and the tanks have been supervised by
              myself and Miss Joan Procter, who has just
              been appointed Curator of Reptiles, and is
              taking over my duties in the autumn.

              "The aquarium will be for fresh water and
              marine animals, and the tanks will be faced
              with plate glass 1¼ inches thick. This glass is
              very expensive, and is a big item in the total
              cost of £50,000.

              "We are getting our sea-water from the Bay
              of Biscay, and it will be brought in the ballast
              tanks of large vessels to the docks and trans-
              ferred there to barges, which will bring it up
              along the Regent's Canal to the Zoo. It will be
              piped from the barges into the tanks by means
              of long fire hoses.

              "Mr. Compton Mackenzie has given us a
              quantity of shell sand from the Island of Herm
              which he owns for some of the tank floors. This
              shell sand is remarkable, for every grain is a
              tiny shell.

              Open Trout Pool.

              "We will have an elaborate system of reser-
              voirs, filtering arrangements, and plant for
              heating, lighting, and ventilating, and the
              aquarium, which will be 400ft. long, will be
              divided into three parts.

              "The fresh-water hall will have 25 tanks, the
              marine hall 20, and the tropical hall 40. We
              will have an open trout pool, a big octagonal
              tank for marine turtle, and a tank for seals
              under water.

              "We will have a wonderful collection of
              tropical fish brilliantly coloured and equal to the
              finest in the world.

              "Not even the New York Aquarium will sur-
              pass it in the beauty of its contents."

              The new aquarium, when it is completed, will
              probably prove one of the biggest attractions at
              Regent's Park.

              Miss Procter, the new Curator of Reptiles,
              was educated at St. Paul's School for Girls,
              and since 1916 has worked in the Reptile De-
              partment at the British Museum, first as volun-
              tary assistant to Dr. Boulenger.

              CUR/3/3/3/31 · Part · 1923-07-23 - 1923-07-28
              Part of Curators and Keepers

              SUMMARY:
              Press cuttings report Miss Joan Proctor’s appointment as curator of reptiles at the London Zoo, describe her lifelong interest in reptiles and her unusual pets, and note her experiments with axolotls. Additional New Zealand clippings reprise the news and include a light verse celebrating her fearlessness.

              CONTENT:
              Cutting from the Dundee Telegraph
              Address of Publication
              Issue dated

                1. 23

              GIRL ZOO CURATOR AND
              HER QUEER PALS.
              Boa Constrictor and
              Crocodile as Playmates.
              Turning a "Water Creature" Dry.

              Miss Joan Proctor, the young girl who
              has been appointed curator of reptiles at
              the London Zoo, is somewhat shy to talk
              about her life work, which has been the
              study of creatures from which the average
              person turns with a shudder.

              A slightly-built, smiling girl, with a pleasant
              expression, she is now busily engaged
              in the new aquarium in course of construction
              at the Zoo.

              It was with reluctance that she admitted
              her identity. Asked when she began to be
              interested in snakes, she replied—

              "I never did begin, I have always been
              interested in them. I have worked among
              them since the time I left school. I have
              been at the Natural History Museum so far,
              and I am coming to my new post here in
              November.

              "Yes, I have kept a great many pets of
              all sorts," she continued. "Which is the
              most unusual? Oh, they are all considered
              unusual. Among them was a boa constrictor.
              It is in the reptile house now—five
              feet long and perfectly tame. I kept it at
              home, and usually had it loose. It was shut
              up at night. Of course, I did not allow it
              to be about in the same room with the
              cat. It would have eaten pussy.

              "I have also had a crocodile, an alligator,
              and all sorts of snakes and lizards. I have
              never had the slightest trouble with them.
              They were all great pets and quite tame."
              When asked if she had trained any of her
              peculiar pets to do tricks, Miss Proctor
              merely smiled and said she did not want
              anything theatrical to be said about her and
              her pets.

              She thinks, however, that the reptile
              house is one of the most popular places in
              the Zoo, especially with children.
              "Children," she said, "are not afraid of
              the reptiles."

              Miss Proctor's own collection of animals,
              it may be added, is a considerable one.
              The crocodile to which she referred was her
              playmate when she was quite a little girl
              of seven years old. It, however, only lived
              two years.

              To see her making friends with a Brazilian
              mongoose snake, which is one of her
              favourites at present, would scare the ordinary
              girl. A small python is also one of
              her present possessions, and she has a number
              of lizards.

              Recently she succeeded with certain experiments
              in regard to axolotls. She
              managed to change the habits of one of
              them by scientifically reducing his allowance
              of water, and transformed it from a water
              creature to a land creature.

              New Zealand
              DUNEDIN, SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1923.
              THE EVENING STAR,
              WOMAN AS SNAKE EXPERT.
              IMPORTANT APPOINTMENT.

              LONDON, July 20.
              (Received July 21, at 11 a.m.)
              The Daily Express says that Miss
              Joan Proctor, an English girl, aged
              twenty-five, has been appointed curator
              of reptiles at the London Zoological Gardens.
              Her grandfather was a famous herpetologist.
              Miss Proctor had her first
              pet snake when she was ten years of age.
              One day she received a crocodile as a present,
              and took it to Dr Boulenger, head of
              the department of reptiles in the Natural
              History Museum at South Kensington.
              He was astonished at Miss Proctor's
              knowledge, and offered to train her. She
              became Dr Boulenger's assistant when she
              was eighteen, and succeeded him when he
              resigned. She is one of the greatest
              snake experts in the world, and is a
              fellow of the Zoological and Linnæan Societies.—A.
              and N.Z. Cable.

              DUNEDIN, SATURDAY, JULY 28, 1923.
              THE EVENING STAR.
              New Zealand

              Joan Proctor was a little maid
              Who never learnt to be afraid
              Of caterpillars, slugs, or worms,
              Or anything that creeps or squirm.

              The birthday gift that first would fill her
              With gladness was a caterpillar.
              But great was her rejoicing when,
              Attaining to the age of ten,
              Some kindly friend contrived to make
              A present of a lovely snake.

              This gift with some might well beget
              Dislike of a reptilian pet;
              But Joan's small soul was tickled greatly.
              She loved that serpent passionately!
              And often (when the day was fine)
              She bathed it in the Serpentine.
              This lasted for a little while,
              And then the sweetest crocodile,
              With legs and jaws and tail complete,
              Was sent her for a birthday treat.

              Too lovely to enjoy alone,
              She took it to South Kensington.
              Thus opened her career of fame,
              And soon our heroine became
              The highest number on the lists
              Of female serpentologists.
              So great her reputation grew
              That now she's been promoted to
              Command the snake-house at the Zoo!

              MORAL
              So, little girls, be sure you keep
              From fear of things that crawl and creep.
              Whene'er you're terrified or scared,
              Just think of how Joan Proctor fared.

              CUR/3/3/3/30 · Part · 1923-08-18 - 1923-08-05
              Part of Curators and Keepers

              SUMMARY:
              Press clippings report that Miss Joan Procter, aged 25, has been appointed curator of reptiles at the London Zoological Gardens, highlighting her lifelong expertise with snakes and her prior work at South Kensington. Coverage includes details of her scientific distinctions and international recognition.

              CONTENT:
              The Girls' Own Free Press

              MEETS CRAWLY THINGS
              FROM ZOO AS FRIENDS

              Woman Appointed Curator of Rep-
              tiles at London

              Girls who are afraid of mice, spid-
              ers, beetles, newts, snakes, and such
              unfamiliar things may shudder at
              hearing that Miss Joan Procter has
              been appointed curator of the rep-
              tiles at the Zoo in London, England.
              Miss Procter does not shudder at
              any kind of animal, for they are her
              familiars, especially snakes. She
              began keeping snakes as pets when
              she was ten. When she was eigh-
              teen she became an assistant in the
              reptiles department at South Ken-
              sington.
              Now, at 25, she goes to the Zoo to
              be the friend of all the crawly and
              cold-blooded things, as she is the
              friend of the collection she keeps
              in her home.

              WINNIPEG, SATURDAY, AUGUST 18, 1923.
              THE WINNIPEG EVENING TRIBUNE.
              SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 1923

              SNAKE EXPERT

              Accordingly, as soon as
              she left school she became Dr. Bou-
              lenger's assistant, this at the age of
              eighteen, and when he resigned she
              was appointed to his post. Last year
              the New York Zoological Society of-
              fered her a job, but she would not
              leave the Kensington Museum. Now,
              of course, she will have to give up her
              work there.

              The young expert came into real
              contact with the zoological society at
              the age of nineteen when she read her
              first paper, on pit snakes, before them.
              A year later they made her F.Z.S.
              At the beginning of July she gained
              another distinction by being elected
              F.L.S., Fellow of the Linnæan Society,
              one of the foremost scientific organi-
              zations in the world.
              Being surrounded by snakes during
              her attendance at the zoo apparently
              is not enough for Miss Proctor, and
              she keeps six Brazilian snakes in a
              glass cage in her drawing-room. These
              were sent her as a gift. Noted scien-
              tists in South America and South
              Africa have frequently sent rare and
              deadly reptiles to England, knowing
              her interest, and most of these she
              keeps at her own home.

              MISS JOAN PROCTOR, F.Z.S., F.L.S.
              Miss Proctor has been appointed
              curator of reptiles at the Zoological
              Gardens. She is 25 years old and
              acknowledged to be one of the great-
              est authorities on snakes in the world,
              and the ease with which she handles
              even the most deadly specimens is
              astonishing. Her last post was that
              of chief of the department of reptiles
              at the Natural History Museum,
              South Kensington. Miss Proctor re-
              cently refused an offer from the Zoo-
              logical Society of New York.
              Miss Proctor does not shudder at
              any kind of animal, for they are her
              familiars, especially snakes. She be-
              gan keeping snakes as pets when she
              was ten. When she was 18 she be-
              came an assistant in the reptiles' de-
              partment at South Kensington.
              Now she goes to the Zoo to be the
              friend of all the crawly and cold
              blooded things, as she is the friend
              of the collection she keeps in her
              home.

              New York Tribune.
              5 AUG 1923

              Reptiles Put
              Under Care of
              Woman Expert

              Snakes Are Special Pets of
              Miss Joan Proctor, Who
              Has Been Appointed as a
              Curator in London Zoo

              LONDON,
              Snakes and crocodiles are not per-
              haps, the most pleasant creatures with
              which to live, but Miss Joan Proctor
              evidently thinks otherwise. This
              young Englishwoman has just been
              appointed curator of the reptile house
              at the London Zoological Gardens,
              where she will have entire charge of
              the cobras, the pythons, the alligators
              and all the other reptiles.
              Miss Proctor's grandfather was a
              famous entomologist, so possibly her
              interest and aptitude in the subject
              are inherited. It certainly looks as
              though she is going to become as well
              known as he was, for already she is
              looked on by zoologists as one of the
              greatest of snake experts.
              When in her very early teens she
              happened to visit the chief of the rep-
              tile department at the South Kensing-
              ton Natural History Museum and so
              astonished him by her knowledge of
              ophiology—she had kept snakes and
              lizards as pets since her tenth birth-
              day—that he offered to train her in
              the subject.

              SOUTH AFRICAN PAPER
              FAMOUS SNAKE EXPERT

              Girl Scientist Who Does
              Not Advertise

              Miss Joan Procter, F.Z.S., F.L.S., an
              Englishwoman of 25 (who does not adver-
              tise herself), has been appointed curator
              of reptiles at the London Zoo. She will
              have complete charge of dozens of venom-
              ous cobras, deadly pythons, boa constric-
              tors, alligators and crocodiles.
              Miss Procter, unknown to the world at
              large (for she does not advertise herself),
              is famous among zoologists as one of the
              greatest snake experts of the day.
              Johannesburg
              Sunday Times

              Girl Is World Snake Expert

              Miss Joan Proctor, the twenty-
              three-year-old girl recently made
              curator of reptiles in the London
              Zoological Gardens, had her first pet
              snake when ten years old and her
              knowledge of crocodiles brought her
              the assistance of Dr. Boulenger, head
              of the department of reptiles, several
              years ago. She was 15 when she be-
              came his assistant and succeeded
              him when he resigned. She is one of
              the greatest snake experts in the
              world.
              AMERICAN PAPER
              HARTFORD COURANT
              ARIZONA, U.S.A.

              CUR/3/3/3/47 · Part · 1923-10-16 - 1923-10-11
              Part of Curators and Keepers

              SUMMARY:
              Press clippings report Miss Joan Proctor’s appointment as curator of reptiles at the London Zoological Gardens, highlighting her expertise with snakes and her work at the British Museum and South Kensington’s Natural History Museum. Items include notices from Ottawa, the New York Tribune, and the Adelaide Register dated October 1923.

              CONTENT:
              OTTAWA
              BOSSES SNAKES.
              City (Ottawa)

              Miss Joan Proctor, an English
              girl of 25, has just been appointed
              curator of reptiles at the London
              Zoological Gardens. She is one of
              the best known experts on snakes
              in the world.

              RULES SNAKES

              JEAN PROCTOR.
              (Kadri & Herbert Photo.)
              This young woman has special-
              ized in the study of reptiles and is
              said to be able to handle snakes
              which would be enraged at the
              touch of the ordinary person and
              show the resentment by a poison-
              ous bite. Miss Proctor recently be-
              came curator of reptiles at the Lon-
              don Zoological gardens.

              from the
              Press of Publication
              dated
              Register
              Adelaide
              Oct 16-1923

              CURATOR OF REPTILES AT THE LONDON "ZOO," MISS
              JOAN PROCTOR, WITH A FRIEND.

              Preserving reptile to the daily occupation of Miss Joan Proc-
              tor, F.Z.S., F.L.S. In her spare time she studies their habits. One
              of the greatest experts on snakes in her day, Miss Proctor has
              worked since 1916 in the reptile department at the British
              Museum—first as a voluntary assistant, and then as expert in
              charge. She is the author of a large number of papers on the
              anatomy, classification, and habits of reptiles and batrachians,
              and owns a private collection of living specimens.

              Cutting from the
              Address of Publication
              Issue dated
              Register
              Adelaide
              Oct 11/23

              Her Reptilian Family.
              The second of the lady curators ap-
              pointed by the Zoological Society, Miss
              Joan Proctor, will take over her duties
              in charge of the reptiles at Regent's Park
              during the autumn. Miss Proctor 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 collec-
              tion of live snakes and batrachians. She
              has designed the whole of the rockwork
              for the new aquarium at the Zoo.

              NEW YORK
              TRIBUNE
              Reptiles Put
              Under Care of
              Woman Expert

              Snakes Are Special Pets of
              Miss Joan Proctor, Who
              Has Been Appointed as a
              Curator in London Zoo

              New York Trib. LONDON,
              Snakes and crocodiles are not, per-
              haps, the most pleasant creatures with
              which to live, but Miss Joan Proctor
              evidently thinks otherwise. This
              young Englishwoman has just been
              appointed curator of the reptile house
              at the London Zoological Gardens,
              where she will have entire charge of
              the cobras, the pythons, the alligators
              and all the other reptiles.
              Miss Proctor's grandfather was a
              famous entomologist, so possibly her
              interest and aptitude in the subject
              are inherited. It certainly looks as
              though she is going to become as well
              known as he was, for already she is
              looked on by zoologists as one of the
              greatest of snake experts.
              When in her very early teens she
              happened to visit the chief of the rep-
              tile department at the South Kensing-
              ton Natural History Museum and so
              astonished him by her knowledge of
              ophiology—she had kept snakes and
              lizards as pets since her tenth birth-
              day—that he offered to train her in
              the subject. Accordingly, as soon as
              she left school she became Dr. Bou-
              lenger's assistant, this at the age of
              eighteen, and when he resigned she
              was appointed to his post. Last year
              the New York Zoological Society of-
              fered her a job, but she would not
              leave the Kensington Museum. Now,
              of course, she will have to give up her
              work there.
              The young expert came into real
              contact with the zoological society at
              the age of nineteen when she read her
              first paper, on pit snakes, before them.
              A year later they made her F. Z. S.
              At the beginning of July she gained
              another distinction by being elected
              F. L. S., Fellow of the Linnean Society,
              one of the foremost scientific organi-
              zations in the world.
              Being surrounded by snakes during
              her attendance at the zoo apparently
              is not enough for Miss Proctor, and
              she keeps six Brazilian snakes in a
              glass cage in her drawing-room. These
              were sent her as a gift. Noted scien-
              tists in South America and South
              Africa have frequently sent rare and
              deadly reptiles to England, knowing
              her interest, and most of these she
              keeps at her own home.

              CUR/3/3/3/52 · Part · 1923-12-29 - 1923-11-04
              Part of Curators and Keepers

              SUMMARY:
              Newspaper cuttings report record attendance at the Zoological Society's Gardens, the near-completion of the Aquarium, and staffing changes including Miss Joan Procter becoming Curator of Reptiles. Articles from The Times, Cape Argus, Sunday Mail (Brisbane), and Yorkshire Post highlight new zoo arrivals and Procter's expertise with reptiles.

              CONTENT:
              THE TIMES, SATURDAY,
              DECEMBER 29, 1923.

              THE ZOO IN 1923.

              RECENT ADDITIONS.
              Although there is still the attendance on
              Sunday and the attendance and gate money
              of Monday to be placed to the credit of the
              year, 1923 has already established a "record"
              in the history of the Zoological Society. The
              number of visitors has been over 1,600,000—
              that is to say, larger than the total of 1920,
              which until now was the largest attendance in
              any one year. The gate money has increased
              in proportion also, and the total number of
              Fellows, as well as the number of new Fellows
              elected, and the receipts from subscriptions,
              are also the largest in the history of the
              Society.
              There have been, too, an unusual number
              of important additions to the collection, so
              that now there is an exceptionally fine display
              of mammals, birds, reptiles, and batrachians.
              Among the additions of special interest are a
              young African elephant presented by Sir
              Horace Byatt, two young giraffes, purchased
              from the Sudan and South Africa respectively,
              two great anteaters, purchased from South
              America, and the recently acquired walrus.
              There have been important changes of staff.
              Mr. R. I. Pocock, formerly superintendent,
              has retired on pension on attaining the age
              of 60, and has been replaced by Dr. G. M.
              Vevers; Mr. D. Seth Smith, formerly Curator
              of Birds, has been promoted to be Resident
              Curator of Mammals and Birds; Mr. E. G.
              Boulenger has left the Reptile House to be-
              come Director of the new Aquarium, and has
              been succeeded by Miss Joan B. Procter, who
              was formerly in charge of the reptiles and
              batrachians at the British Museum. The staff
              of keepers has been subjected to careful sur-
              vey, and there have been rewards and promo-
              tions for the more competent, while some of
              the older men have been retired on pension.
              The Council and the Garden Committee
              have made great efforts to improve the general
              condition of the animals and of the gardens,
              and much more than has been possible in
              recent years has been done to improve the
              general hygienic conditions and to repair and
              redecorate houses and enclosures. The largest
              and most expensive work of the year has been
              the construction of the Aquarium. This is
              now practically completed, only minor details
              of lighting and decoration being still in hand.
              The difficult business of stocking has begun,
              and it is anticipated that it will be opened
              to Fellows and the public in the first fort-
              night of April.

              ZOO VISITORS: A RECORD.
              During 1923 the visitors to the Zoological
              Society's Gardens, Regent's Park, numbered
              1,613,125, an increase of 185,276 as compared
              with 1922.
              The number of visitors last year was the
              largest in the history of the Society.

              from the Yorkshire Post
              of Publication Leeds
              Dated. 24.12.29
              HOLIDAYS IN LONDON.

              HOW TO ENTERTAIN THE
              CHILDREN.

              (FROM A CORRESPONDENT.)
              "NO," the clerk in a large theatre
              office told me, "they don't dare
              to try new Christmas plays in the
              West End. The old favourites are good
              enough for them. You must go to the
              theatres further out if you want something
              new in the way of plays for the children
              this Christmas."

              The morning is often a difficult time to
              entertain children in London, but the Zoo is
              always open, and several new and interest-
              ing inmates have arrived since last holidays.
              Small boys frequently have a liking
              for creepy beasts, and the new reptile
              house, presided over by that young snake
              charmer, Miss Joan Procter, should give
              them the necessary thrills. Baby animals
              to rejoice the heart of the motherly little
              girl are also plentiful at the Zoo this
              Christmas. There is Percy, the six-
              months-old pigmy hippopotamus, already
              becoming quite friendly with visitors,
              while in a pen close by is the slightly older
              African baby elephant. It is amusing to
              see Andy, the youthful walrus, being fed,
              for, although he is five months old, he has
              not a single tooth, and his food—cut up
              strips of cod fish—is placed in his mouth
              by his attendant. For sheer grace and
              agility, the baby antelopes surpass any-
              thing I have ever seen, and one can under-
              stand their having an audience round their
              cage quite as enthusiastic as that which
              greets the Fairy Queen in the pantomime.

              Telephone No. Central 7980.
              International Press-Cutting Bureau

              1. New Bridge Street, London, E.C.4.

              Extract from
              CAPE ARGUS
              CAPE TOWN.

              Date

              1. DEC 1923

              Girl Curator of Reptiles.—The new
              Curator of Reptiles at the London Zoo-
              logical Gardens is a young woman. Miss
              Joan Procter, F.Z.S., F.L.S., is a
              recognised authority in this branch of
              science: in fact, she is said to know
              more about snakes and reptiles than
              any woman in the world. Until now
              she has been in charge of the Reptile
              Department at the British Museum of
              Natural History. Miss Procter has a
              special instinct for the handling of
              poisonous snakes. She has not the
              slightest dread of any kind of reptile.

              International Press-Cutting Bureau,

              Extract from
              SUNDAY MAIL
              BRISBANE.

              Date 4 NOV 1923

              CURATOR OF REPTILES

              Woman Appointed

              Miss Joan Procter, F.Z.S., F.L.S., an
              Englishwoman of 25, has been appointed
              curator of reptiles at the Zoo in London.
              She has complete charge of dozens of
              venomous cobras, deadly pythons, boa
              constrictors, alligators and crocodiles.
              Miss Procter, unknown to the world
              at large, is famous among zoologists as
              one of the greatest snake experts of the
              day. The large, tiny room in the base-
              ment of the Museum of Natural History,
              South Kensington, in which she works
              is filled with deadly snakes, some bottled
              and some alive.
              "Her interest in the subject is pro-
              bably hereditary," said her mother
              a Press correspondent. "Her grandfather
              was a famous entomologist."
              Miss Procter opened a glass cage in
              her drawing-room and six beautiful
              Brazilian snakes, which were sent to her
              daughter as a gift, she allowed them to
              climb and wriggle and coil around her arm.
              "At the age of ten my daughter had
              her first snake as a pet." Mrs. Procter
              added. "She also kept many lizards, most
              of them remarkably tame. One day she
              received a large and valuable crocodile
              as a present, and we took it to Dr. G. A.
              Boulenger, the famous chief of the de-
              partment of reptiles at the Natural
              History Museum at South Kensington.
              "He was astonished at my daughter's
              knowledge of ophiology, and offered to
              train her on the subject when she left
              St. Paul's School. She became his assis-
              tant when she was 18, and when he re-
              signed she was appointed to his post.
              Scientists in South Africa and South
              America have sent Miss Procter rare and
              deadly reptiles from jungles and swamps.
              Occasionally a crate for them has been
              overturned on arrival, and they have
              been spilled on the floor. Miss Procter,
              without the slightest fear, has collected
              the poisonous creatures from their hiding
              places.
              She read her first paper on "The Pygmy
              Snake," before the Zoological Society at
              the age of 19. She was made a Fellow of
              the society at 20. She was elected a
              Fellow of the Linnaean Society, one of
              the foremost scientific organisations in
              the world, last August. She is also a
              Fellow of the Zoological Society of Bom-
              bay, and last year was offered a remu-
              nerative post by the Zoological Society of
              New York.

              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.

              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/3/3/3/16 · Part · 1921-07-20 - 1920-07-21
              Part of Curators and Keepers

              SUMMARY:
              Newspaper cuttings report that Miss Joan Proctor/Procter, aged 25, has been appointed Curator of Reptiles at the Zoological Gardens. Articles describe her background at the British Museum/Museum of Natural History, her expertise handling venomous snakes, and her work designing aquarium tanks and contributing to antivenom research.

              CONTENT:
              who ever lived. Praise she merits, but
              Cutting from the Daily Post
              July 19th
              One Woman's Speciality.

              Not to every woman would the curatorship
              of reptiles at the Zoological Gardens
              appeal, but to have received the position is
              an honour decidedly. This honour has
              fallen to Miss Joan Proctor, who will take
              up her work in the autumn. Educated at
              St. Paul's School for Girls, Miss Proctor
              has been in the reptile department of the
              British Museum for seven years, and may
              be said to know her job backwards. Not
              content with studying the habits, anatomy,
              and little ways of reptiles and batrachians
              in working hours, she keeps a collection of
              the living creatures at home. She is at the
              moment designing rockwork for the
              aquarium tanks at the Zoo.

              From the Soho News July 21st
              CHAMPION GIRL SNAKE EXPERT.

              Miss Joan Proctor, F.L.S.
              Miss Proctor, aged 25, as already
              described in the "Echo," is one of the
              greatest snake experts in the world, and has
              been appointed Curator of Reptiles at the
              Zoological Gardens. She handles the most
              deadly reptiles with the greatest ease.

              Cutting from the Belfast Telegraph
              Address of Publication
              Issue dated 20. 7. 21

              GREAT SNAKE EXPERT.
              GIRL'S CHARGE OF REPTILES.
              CAN HANDLE DEADLY SERPENTS.
              Miss Joan Proctor, F.Z.S., an English
              girl of 25, has been appointed curator of
              reptiles at the Zoo. She will have com-
              plete charge of dozens of venomous cobras,
              deadly pythons, boa constrictors, alligators
              and crocodiles. Miss Proctor, unknown to
              the world at large, has for several years
              gained fame as one of the greatest snake
              experts of the day. The large, airy room
              in the basement of the Museum of Natural
              History, South Kensington, in which she
              works, is filled with bottled and occasionally
              live specimens of the most deadly snakes in
              the world.

              Miss Proctor is now engaged in designing
              the 60 tanks to form the most wonderful
              aquarium in the world, which are being con-
              structed at a cost of £50,000, under the
              Mappin Terraces in the Zoo. Miss Proctor
              is making models of each tank to scale from
              her studies of rocks and seaweeds made
              during holidays at the seaside. Miss
              Proctor has performed work of incalculable
              value while at the Museum of Natural
              History by preparing a complete series of
              the teeth of poisonous snakes for the School
              of Tropical Medicine. Her researches have
              enabled the school to prepare antidotes for
              the bites of various deadly snakes.
              Miss Proctor is resigning in the autumn
              from her present position as chief of the
              department of reptiles at the British
              Museum of Natural History at South Kens-
              ington. She has already won many honours
              that are only as a rule bestowed after a
              life-time of research work. She read her
              first paper on the pitsnake before the Zoo-
              logical Society at the age of 19. She was
              made a Fellow of the Society at 20. She
              was elected a Fellow of the Linnean Society,
              one of the foremost scientific organisations
              in the world, a fortnight ago. She is also
              a Fellow of the Zoological Society of Bom-
              bay, and last year was offered a remuner-
              ative post by the Zoological Society of New
              York.

              Cutting from the Dundee Courier
              Address of Publication
              Issue dated 21. 7. 20

              GIRL AS SNAKE EXPERT.
              Miss Joan Procter, F.Z.S., F.L.S., an
              Englishwoman of 25, has been appointed
              curator of reptiles at the Zoo. She will
              have complete charge of dozens of venomous
              cobras, deadly pythons, boa constrictors, alli-
              gators, and crocodiles. Miss Procter, un-
              known to the world at large, is famous
              among zoologists as one of the greatest
              snake experts of the day. Scientists in
              South Africa and South America have sent
              Miss Procter rare and deadly reptiles from
              jungles and swamps. Occasionally a crate
              of them has been overturned on arrival, and
              they have been spilled on the floor, Miss
              Procter, without the slightest fear, has col-
              lected the poisonous creatures from their
              hiding places.

              CUR/3/3/3/27 · Part · 1921-08-04 - 1923-08-03
              Part of Curators and Keepers

              SUMMARY:
              Newspaper cuttings (1921–1927) report Miss Joan Procter’s appointment and work as Curator of Reptiles at the Zoo, highlighting her background at the Natural History Museum and her early interest in reptiles. Articles also note her education at St. Paul’s School for Girls and collaboration with Dr. G. A. Boulenger, as well as her design work for new aquarium tanks.

              CONTENT:
              Cutting from the Children's Newspaper
              Address of Publication
              Issue dated 4.8.21

              FRIEND OF THE CRAWLY
              THINGS
              Miss Procter of the Zoo
              Ladies who are afraid of mice, spiders,
              beetles, newts, snakes, and such un-
              familiar things may shudder at hearing
              that Miss Joan Procter has been ap-
              pointed curator of the reptiles at the Zoo
              in London.
              Miss Procter does not shudder at any
              kind of animal, for they are her familiars,
              especially snakes. She began keeping
              snakes as pets when she was ten. When
              she was eighteen she became an assistant
              in the reptiles' department at South
              Kensington.
              Now, at 25, she goes to the Zoo to be
              the friend of all the crawly and cold-
              blooded things, as she is the friend of the
              collection she keeps in her home.

              Cutting from the Schoolmistress
              Address of Publication
              Issue dated 2.8.27

              CURATOR AT THE ZOO.
              Miss Joan B. Procter, F.Z.S., who, on
              account of her writings and research work
              in zoology, was recently made a Fellow of
              the Linnean Society, has been appointed
              curator of reptiles at the Zoological
              Gardens. For several years Miss Procter
              has been a worker in the Reptile Depart-
              ment of the Natural History Museum at
              South Kensington, and she hopes to keep
              on with her research work there, in addition
              to taking charge of the reptile houses and
              the tortoises at the Zoo. At present she is
              engaged on designing the decorative rock-
              work 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. The largest of
              the tanks will be 30 ft. in length. The
              tanks are being made partly of natural
              rocks, such as Cornish granite, and partly of
              Portland cement.

              M Miss Procter No.

              From The General Press Cutting
              Association, Ltd.
              ATLANTIC HOUSE,
              45-50, HOLBORN VIADUCT, E.C. 1.
              TELEPHONE: HOLBORN 4015.

              Cutting from the Suffragette Telegraph
              Address of Publication
              Issue dated 10.8.23

              The newest profession for women is an extra-
              ordinary one, in which there will be little
              competition. Few women would care to spend
              their working hours among reptiles, yet it is a
              lady, Miss Joan Procter, who has been appointed
              Curator of Reptiles at the Zoo. Miss Procter
              was educated at St. Paul's School for Girls, and
              has worked in the Reptile Department as assis-
              tant of Mr. Boulenger, who now becomes
              Curator of the New Aquarium.

              M Miss Joan Procter No.

              From The General Press Cutting
              Association, Ltd.
              ATLANTIC HOUSE,
              45-50, HOLBORN VIADUCT, E.C. 1.
              TELEPHONE: HOLBORN 4015.

              Cutting from the Machinery Market
              Address of Publication
              Issue dated 3.8.23

              Woman Curator of Reptiles.
              Miss Joan Procter, F.Z.S., F.L.S., will take
              up in November the position of curator of rep-
              tiles at the Zoological Gardens. Miss Procter,
              who was educated at St. Paul's School for
              Girls, worked for some years with Dr. G. A.
              Boulenger, who is relinquishing the position.
              She has been interested in reptiles and frogs
              since her school days and keeps a collection in
              her Kensington home.