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              6 Archival description results for Washington

              REP/4 · File · 1934-1940
              Part of Reports

              List of American zoos by A Lindsay; Report of a visit to New York and Chicago (1936); 'Notes on visits to some foreign zoos, 1934 and 1935' by Huxley (covering New York Bronx, Philadelphia, Washington, Paris Vincennes, Hamburg, Berlin, Munich Hellabrun, & Frankfurt); extract from report on the British Colonial Exhibit, World's Fair, New York, 1939; Report on visit to Austria and Germany by D Seth Smith (c1937); Report on a visit to the Zoological Gardens at Antwerp, Rotterdam and Amsterdam (1935); Report on a visit to France (1938); letter from Chalmers Mitchell to the Directors of Zoological Gardens in Germany, introducing Huxley, 1935; handwritten notes on zoos; notebook; 'La Reproduction des Animaux Sauvages en Captivite' by A Urbain; Report on visit to Brookfield Zoo (1940); guide to Internationalen Jagdaustellung, Berlin, 1937.

              CUR/3/3/3/4 · Part · 1923-09-23
              Part of Curators and Keepers

              SUMMARY:
              A Public Ledger feature profiles Joan Proctor, curator of reptiles at the London Zoological Gardens, detailing her compassionate methods for handling snakes and her role in designing a new reptile house. The article shares anecdotes about boas and king cobras, feeding challenges in zoos, and public reactions to her work.

              CONTENT:
              PUBLIC LEDGER—PHILADELPHIA, SUNDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 23, 1923

              Her Playmates are Ugly King Cobras!

              Miss Proctor finds a handker-
              chief useful for securing a grip
              on the tail of a poisonous snake
              friend that might become too
              playful

              Miss Joan Proctor,
              Curator of Reptiles
              in the London
              Zoological Gardens,
              Tells How She
              Overcomes Her
              Serpentine Pets With
              Sheer Kindness

              THE first woman in the world was on
              sociable terms with a serpent, and
              the world knows what came of that.

              But here is one of Eve's youngest
              daughters handling, petting and caring
              for innumerable descendants of that wily
              snake of old. Her name is Joan Proctor
              and her official title is curator of reptiles
              of the London Zoological Gardens.

              The feeling that soft, purring, cuddly
              little kittens awaken in other small girls
              came to Joan when, as an inquisitive
              ten-year-old, she first made the acquaint-
              ance of a shining, wriggling green
              garter snake, and that strange fondness
              for the first enemy of man has grown
              and grown until her greatest joy in life
              is playing foster-mother to all the alli-
              gators, toads, turtles and reptiles in
              London's famous Zoo.

              The family in which Joan belonged
              didn't exactly favor the predilection of
              its youngest member for crawling things,
              when that first slimy, glassy-eyed
              creature was introduced into their happy
              home. But Joan was a positive little
              person. She made it plain that her mot-
              to was "Love me, love my snakes!"
              and presently the whole Proctor clan
              progressed from abhorrence to indiffer-
              ence. They could put their hands into
              a presumably empty vase on the living
              room table, touch the cold coil of a snake
              and not fall in a faint.

              From indifference, the Proctors went
              on until they began to share Joan's un-
              canny affection for creeping things, and
              now her home would not be home with-
              out at least three boa constrictors
              draping themselves about the furniture.

              When Joan was seventeen she read
              her first paper about snakes before the
              Royal Zoological Society—a paper that
              attracted serious attention. A few years
              later, she became the unsalaried assistant
              of the curator of reptiles at the
              British Museum of Natural History—
              truly a labor of love. In the museum
              laboratory she worked and studied amid
              hundreds of jars and bottles containing
              creeping things. And all the time at
              home she watched over the boas, the
              bushmasters, the asps and the black
              snakes that succeeded each other at
              home as the darlings of her heart.

              SO IT was that when the council of
              the Royal Zoological Society found
              it necessary to engage a new custodian

              Eve in the Garden of
              Eden was the first woman
              on friendly terms with
              the serpents, and so it has
              come to pass that in this
              day, many years after the
              creation, there are daugh-
              ters of Eve who do not
              find it so distasteful to
              train serpents and care for
              them tenderly

              Miss Proctor believes a daily "air-
              ing is good for any household
              pet. Here she is with a pet rep-
              tile which she has taken for a
              walk through the grounds of her
              London home

              for its great collection of living reptiles,
              Joan, whose paper on snakes read be-
              fore that august body so early in her
              career had made such an impression,
              was unanimously decided upon as the
              logical recipient of the honor,

              "It's a very simple thing to get on
              with reptiles of any sort," says the
              new curator, illustrating her point by
              using one of her favorite poisonous-
              tongued friends as a neckpiece. "By
              using a handkerchief to make sure of
              my grip on his tail, he can't get too
              playful, you see. The dear things do
              love to twist themselves about people's
              necks, and then sometimes they squeeze
              too hard." Which, it may be clearly
              seen, is not so good for the neck.

              "Kindness and real understanding are
              back of success with snakes," decrees
              the only woman occupant of a position
              of such scientific note in Great Britain.
              So great is the confidence reposed in
              this young woman by those who know,
              that she is not only to care for the huge
              creeping things of the jungle, but has
              been empowered to design the new home
              for reptiles at the London Zoological
              Gardens, and is now engaged in deciding

              The neck of a human being is just the sort of a
              "warmer" that a tropical snake
              loves to coil about—and
              squeeze—so Miss Proctor
              adopts the simple "Safety
              First" measure of holding the
              head and tail securely as she
              handles this small but surpris-
              ingly powerful boa

              When, as a ten-year-old girl, Joan
              introduced her first creeping pet
              into the Proctor household, her
              parents were not at all inclined to
              approve the strange friendship,
              but Joan's persuasive powers over-
              came that difficulty. Snakes of
              varying lengths and colors have
              since established friendly relations
              with all members of the Proctor
              household. Here is Joan's mother
              demonstrating the innocent inten-
              tions of a twelve-foot boa

              constrictor just then draped about her
              neck.

              A neck, Miss Proctor explains, is
              an ideal "warmer" for a tropical
              snake. There's nothing he likes better
              than to coil about it. Coping with Mr.
              Boa in this case means keeping a firm

              —usually expensive and difficult to ob-
              tain—and that only will they swallow.
              How to combat this suicide tendency
              in reptiles will probably engross Miss
              Proctor as it engrosses most curators
              of these temperamental creatures. Ray-
              mond L. Ditmars, of the New York Zoo,
              reports that a continual offender in this
              regard is the bushmaster.

              King cobras are another variety of
              Miss Proctor's charges likely to become
              obnoxious at times. Or, at least, that
              has been the experience of other cura-
              tors.

              When this monarch among snakes
              arrived at the Bronx Zoo, he registered
              his dislike of the institution and his
              objection to remaining in it by refusing
              to eat at all. As he is a cannibal, he
              was offered every species of crawling
              thing the authorities had ever heard of
              a cobra eating. But no! Nothing
              doing! Never in this world, so said the
              cobra in question, if his expression mir-
              rored his thoughts.

              At length a "coach whip," a nice, five-
              foot appetizing morsel, was sent in for
              the rebel's breakfast. That hit the spot.
              The king cobra ate it and demanded
              more of the same. And there the scheme
              struck a snag, for coach whips cost
              three dollars each and aren't to be had
              at all times for a striking monarch's
              fastidious taste.

              What was to be done? The diet of
              coach whip had been kept up while the
              curator engaged in thought, and now
              long, thin strips of beef were cut in the
              length of the favorite food, and each
              strip covered with one of the old skins
              the coach whip had shed. The skin
              was tied about the beef at intervals and
              the strips were offered to his majesty
              for the next meal. And he ate them.

              Diplomacy, as will be seen, belongs
              not alone to court and political circles.

              Snakes are not the only pets to be found in Miss Proctor's home. Pussy jumped upon a
              table to see what this tricky boa was doing. The boa turned its head away as if it had not
              the slightest interest in the cat's presence. The photographer snapped just before the lightning-
              swift strike that was sad news for pussy

              just where, what and how big the quar-
              ters for her favorites shall be,

              "Woman snake-charmer!" shrieked
              local newspaper headlines, when this
              announcement was made.

              "I'm not!" contradicted Miss Proctor,
              showing a surprising little glint in her
              eyes—a glint that may be the secret
              of her power over the descendants of
              that serpent that tempted Eve.

              "You might call me a 'snake-keeper,

              if you will, but not a snake-charmer.
              Do you know what a snake-charmer
              is? Some queer voodoo sort of person with
              supernatural powers. Of course, I'm not
              that! It's so easy to get on with snakes.
              Why, if you've learned the way to deal
              with a two-foot garter snake, you know
              how to cope with an eight-foot python!
              They are all so much alike." The foster-
              mother of London's reptiles caressed the
              fine head of the amazingly powerful boa

              grip on head and tail so that his en-
              thusiasm for the human eater doesn't
              carry him too far.

              "There are many problems for this
              little woman with the big nerve to solve,
              for snakes who come from other lands
              as captives are likely to behave er-
              ratically as human beings under similar
              circumstances. They go on hunger-
              strikes. They commit suicide. They
              demand one certain kind of food

              THERE are about one thousand species
              of snakes in the world and a goodly
              portion of them are represented in Miss
              Proctor's collection. There is, for in-
              stance, a twenty-foot python, weighing
              three hundred pounds, and a mere
              specimen of burrowing snake but five
              or six inches long and no thicker than
              a goose quill. And there is a squatty,
              flat-headed viper and an enormously
              elongated tree snake—and goodness
              knows how many more.

              What's the good of snakes if you don't
              happen to love them for themselves
              alone, as does Miss Proctor?

              California says they're good for ex-
              terminating gophers that destroy the
              crops on the Pacific Coast. Australia
              applauds reptilian efforts to help them
              get rid of the vermin plague, result of
              accumulation of stocks of wheat because
              of non-shipment during the war. Green-
              wich, Connecticut, urges that snakes be
              used to keep mole-infested lawns in
              order. And the departments in Wash-
              ington point out that rats are the great-
              est destroyers of wheat the world ever
              knew, and snakes live on rats to a great
              extent!

              So Miss Joan Proctor is not alone in
              her opinion that snakes are well worth
              cultivating.

              SEC/9/2/28/6 · Item · 7 May 1935
              Part of ZSL Secretaries

              Notes by Julian Huxley on visits to the Zoological Gardens at New York (Bronx Park), Philadelphia, Washington DC, Paris (Vincennes), Hamburg, Berlin, Munich (Hellabrunn) and Frankfort, also the Aquarium at Chicago

              SEC/9/2/28/6 · Item · 7 May 1935
              Part of ZSL Secretaries

              Draft notes by Julian Huxley on visits to the Zoological Gardens at New York (Bronx Park), Philadelphia, Washington DC, Paris (Vincennes), Hamburg, Berlin, Munich (Hellabrunn) and Frankfort, also the Aquarium at Chicago

              Langley, Samuel Pierpont
              SEC/7/12/4 · Item · 1889
              Part of ZSL Secretaries

              Letter from Samuel Pierpont Langley of the Smithsonian Institution to Philip Lutley Sclater regarding the establishment of a Zoological Park in the City of Washington

              Baird, Spencer Fullerton
              SEC/7/2/1 · File · 1870-1871
              Part of ZSL Secretaries

              Letters from Spencer Fullerton Baird of Washington to Philip Lutley Sclater regarding ornithology