Bib Fortuna
Well-Known Member
Thanks, Tim. Until I looked at the 1911 zoo guide, I thought that the animals listed in Bold were species at the zoo when the guide was written. Listing an animal that hasn't been kept at the zoo for @ 26 years seems dishonest. I have a guide for the Bronx Zoo that listed the indri before it didn't arrive.
Well, zoo guides were, even in the 19th century, not always carefully revised, not even in London. The Thylacine, who died in 1930, can be found in the zoo guide until 1932, including a photo; in the 1933 edition he is still in the register.
I advise you to read the Bronx-zoo Guide 1915-the"Gorilla edition :
" The Gorilla. ....The agents of the New York zoological Socitey are constantly on the watch for an opportunity to procure and send hither a good specimen of this wonderful creature.; and whenever one arrives, all persons interested are advised to see it immedialtely, before it dies of sullness, lack of exercise, and indigestion".
I bet you won't find such information in any zoo guide today.
It's a shame that there was no zoo guide in 1906. I would have liked to know whether this would have been the Ota Benga edition, and whether William T. Hornaday would have discussed Ota Benga in the zoo guide:
"In the next cage you will find a wonderful, male specimen of Homo sapiens pymaeus-The African Pygmy, "Ota Benga." Age, 23 years. Height, 4 feet 11 inches.Weight, 103 pounds. Brought from the
Kasai River, Congo Free State, South Central Africa, by Dr. Samuel P. Verner Benga had been purchased from African slave traders by the missionary Samuel Phillips Verner, a businessman searching for African people for the exhibition. Verner brought him to the United States, where he was sold the New York Zoological park. We are very proud to be able to show you this extremely rare creature, the missing link between humans and animals, as the only zoological garden in the world. Our specimen is called Ota Benga and is generally very sociable.Before he was put on exhibition at the monkey house, he was allowed to roam the grounds of the zoo. In response to the situation, as well as verbal and physical prods from the crowds, he became more mischievous and somewhat violent, so that's why he is now living in the Monkey House."