Sudan

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        Términos jerárquicos

        Sudan

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            Sudan

            5 Descripción archivística resultados para Sudan

            5 resultados directamente relacionados Excluir términos relacionados
            Forbes, Colonel A
            SUP/5/1/1/54 · Unidad documental compuesta · 1945
            Parte de Superintendents

            List of animals by Col A Forbes, Game Warden, Sudan

            Flower, Mrs Sibyl
            CUR/3/1/20 · Unidad documental compuesta · 1922
            Parte de Curators and Keepers

            Letter from Sibyl Flower to Joan Procter regarding her husband being in the Sudan and a box of tortoises to be brought to England

            CUR/3/3/3/52 · Parte · 1923-12-29 - 1923-11-04
            Parte de 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.