A Guidebook Library: TLD's year-long randomised walkthrough of zoo guides

Day 4 - ZSL London Zoo (1877) – Javan Rhinoceros

full


Page count: 70 (including front cover, map and 5 pages of advertisments)
Photographs: None
Illustrations/diagrams: 20 illustrations throughout body of guidebook, plus several illustrations within advertisments
Layout: Comprehensive walkthrough account of collection.
Map: Included as part of body of guidebook

At the time of writing, this is the oldest UK guidebook in my collection by a fairly substantial margin, being the only 19th century item I own from the country; given the extreme rarity of those guidebooks released by London Zoo during the Victorian era, many of which are recorded in the master-list of UK guidebooks maintained by the Bartlett Society as having no known copies outside the ZSL library, it is one of the key cornerstones of my guidebook collection and one of the most valuable zoo-related items I own.

Many of the pre-WWII guidebooks issued by London Zoo contained a wide variety of advertisment material both prior to the main body of the text, and at the end of the text; this book is no exception, with adverts present for such products as "J. C. Eno's Fruit Salt", "Morson's Preparations of Pepsine" and "Epps' Breakfast Cocoa" along with promotion of various services and events in the London area; as such these guidebooks are a valuable snapshot not merely of zoo history, but also of social and commercial history.

full


However, of rather more relevance to the zoo historian - and any zoo enthusiast with an interest in the captive holding of now-extinct or critically endangered taxa - is the fact that this guidebook was released in the middle of a period where London Zoo was home to a vast array of species which have long-since been lost; at the time of publication, taxa such as Passenger Pigeon, Carolina Parakeet, the Indochinese Rhinoceros and the Syrian Wild Ass were all to be found at the zoo, and the last Falkland Island Wolf at the collection had died a mere year previously, with species still-extant today but on the brink of extinction such as Javan Rhinoceros and the Sumatran Rhinoceros also occurring at this time. As such, a particular highlight of this guidebook is the following segment discussing the various rhinoceros holdings at the zoo:

full


The quality of the guidebook as a whole is extremely good, representing a walkthrough account of the zoo and describing the species present in each section of the collection, with copious numbers of high-quality illustrations of select taxa dotted throughout the text, and concludes with a brief overview of the Zoological Society of London and the terms, conditions and benefits attached to becoming a Fellow of the Society. The general layout of these guidebooks - although the content and precise format would change over the years - would remain fairly standardised until the mid-1930s, with the most notable change over the course of this time being the introduction of photographs. This, of course, is something that should be discussed properly another day - at the time this particular guidebook was issued, the only images present within were illustrations and no photographic material was included, as photographs from this timespan are few-and-far-between; the best source for such information is most certainly the two editions of London Zoo from Old Photographs 1852-1914 by John Edwards - a book I very much recommend any zoo enthusiast seriously interested in the history of London Zoo should track down with some alacrity!

full


One of the other key aspects of this guidebook, of course, is the presence of a fairly-detailed map of the collection, located in the opening pages prior to the main body of the text commencing - in my experience, the provision of attractive and useful maps within their guidebooks is something that London Zoo has always done a pretty good job of achieving, even if this particular map is very much skewed towards the functional rather than the artistic.

full


I am fairly certain that those reading this post will have questions aplenty about this particular guidebook, given the fact I have given the briefest and most superficial overview here - I look forward to any and all such enquiries, and will tackle them to the best of my ability!
 
Day 4 - ZSL London Zoo (1877) – Javan Rhinoceros

full


Page count: 70 (including front cover, map and 5 pages of advertisments)
Photographs: None
Illustrations/diagrams: 20 illustrations throughout body of guidebook, plus several illustrations within advertisments
Layout: Comprehensive walkthrough account of collection.
Map: Included as part of body of guidebook

At the time of writing, this is the oldest UK guidebook in my collection by a fairly substantial margin, being the only 19th century item I own from the country; given the extreme rarity of those guidebooks released by London Zoo during the Victorian era, many of which are recorded in the master-list of UK guidebooks maintained by the Bartlett Society as having no known copies outside the ZSL library, it is one of the key cornerstones of my guidebook collection and one of the most valuable zoo-related items I own.

Many of the pre-WWII guidebooks issued by London Zoo contained a wide variety of advertisment material both prior to the main body of the text, and at the end of the text; this book is no exception, with adverts present for such products as "J. C. Eno's Fruit Salt", "Morson's Preparations of Pepsine" and "Epps' Breakfast Cocoa" along with promotion of various services and events in the London area; as such these guidebooks are a valuable snapshot not merely of zoo history, but also of social and commercial history.

full


However, of rather more relevance to the zoo historian - and any zoo enthusiast with an interest in the captive holding of now-extinct or critically endangered taxa - is the fact that this guidebook was released in the middle of a period where London Zoo was home to a vast array of species which have long-since been lost; at the time of publication, taxa such as Passenger Pigeon, Carolina Parakeet, the Indochinese Rhinoceros and the Syrian Wild Ass were all to be found at the zoo, and the last Falkland Island Wolf at the collection had died a mere year previously, with species still-extant today but on the brink of extinction such as Javan Rhinoceros and the Sumatran Rhinoceros also occurring at this time. As such, a particular highlight of this guidebook is the following segment discussing the various rhinoceros holdings at the zoo:

full


The quality of the guidebook as a whole is extremely good, representing a walkthrough account of the zoo and describing the species present in each section of the collection, with copious numbers of high-quality illustrations of select taxa dotted throughout the text, and concludes with a brief overview of the Zoological Society of London and the terms, conditions and benefits attached to becoming a Fellow of the Society. The general layout of these guidebooks - although the content and precise format would change over the years - would remain fairly standardised until the mid-1930s, with the most notable change over the course of this time being the introduction of photographs. This, of course, is something that should be discussed properly another day - at the time this particular guidebook was issued, the only images present within were illustrations and no photographic material was included, as photographs from this timespan are few-and-far-between; the best source for such information is most certainly the two editions of London Zoo from Old Photographs 1852-1914 by John Edwards - a book I very much recommend any zoo enthusiast seriously interested in the history of London Zoo should track down with some alacrity!

full


One of the other key aspects of this guidebook, of course, is the presence of a fairly-detailed map of the collection, located in the opening pages prior to the main body of the text commencing - in my experience, the provision of attractive and useful maps within their guidebooks is something that London Zoo has always done a pretty good job of achieving, even if this particular map is very much skewed towards the functional rather than the artistic.

full


I am fairly certain that those reading this post will have questions aplenty about this particular guidebook, given the fact I have given the briefest and most superficial overview here - I look forward to any and all such enquiries, and will tackle them to the best of my ability!
Does the guidebook mention the Passenger Pigeons or Carolina Parakeets? If so, what does it say about them?
 
One of the other key aspects of this guidebook, of course, is the presence of a fairly-detailed map of the collection, located in the opening pages prior to the main body of the text commencing - in my experience, the provision of attractive and useful maps within their guidebooks is something that London Zoo has always done a pretty good job of achieving, even if this particular map is very much skewed towards the functional rather than the artistic.

full


I am fairly certain that those reading this post will have questions aplenty about this particular guidebook, given the fact I have given the briefest and most superficial overview here - I look forward to any and all such enquiries, and will tackle them to the best of my ability!

Does the guidebook by any chance note which species were kept in the Western aviary, and do you know what that now is? It appears to be around where the aquarium now is so I don't suppose it is the vulture aviary but just drawn in the wrong place?

Also was there only one tunnel into the northern portion of the zoo in those days?
 
I wonder at what point mongoose replaced ichnuemon to become the more common term?
 
....the Western aviary, and do you know what that now is? It appears to be around where the aquarium now is ...
The old Western Aviary was behind the Mappin Terraces (i.e. between the Mappin Terraces and the Outer Circle road) in a part of the zoo no longer open to visitors.
Also was there only one tunnel into the northern portion of the zoo in those days?
Yes there was originally only one tunnel linking the north and south parts of the zoo.

The original tunnel, the East Tunnel, was designed by Decimus Burton and dates from 1829 / 30.

The newer tunnel, the West Tunnel, was built 1919 / 20 and was decorated with reproductions of famous prehistoric cave paintings in 1954.
 
What species of mongoose are even being referred to there?
Assumimg the i word mean mongoose, Gray mongoose, marsh mongoose and banded mongoose?

Also, the good old times when pandas are just pandas, not cuddly black and white bear that cost a ton to give to an authoritarian regime.
 
Does the guide give any information about what was in the Carnivore Terrace (12/13)?

So interesting to see the rough shape of the modern Barclay Court is visible even then

It was historic maps of London Zoo that got me into zoo history back in my teens. That John Edwards book (first edition) has a lot to answer for!
 
I wonder at what point mongoose replaced ichnuemon to become the more common term?
In the book "A Handbook to the Carnivora Part 1 Cats, Civets and Mungooses" (Lydekker; 1896) Richard Lydekker uses the common name "mungoose" throughout so, presumably, that was in general usage by 1896 although London Zoo guides still used the word ichnuemon for some years. (NB Note Lydekker spells it "mungoose" not "mongoose")
 
Does the guidebook by any chance note which species were kept in the Western aviary

It does indeed; there isn't a full list of taxa provided, but there is an introductory paragraph or two giving an overview of the birds held within these aviaries, followed by several more in-depth sections focusing on several (but not all) of the species.

I've transcribed the introduction to the Western Aviary below:

The frontage of this aviary, which was completed in 1851, is about 170 feet in length. It contains some of the most interesting birds in the Collection, principally natives of Australia, the Indian Archipelago, and America.

Among the Australian species, the most remarkable are the BOWER-BIRD, the LAUGHING KINGFISHER, the GRASS-PARRAKEETS, the WONGA-WONGA PIGEON, the BRONZE-WINGED PIGEONS, and the CRESTED DOVE. From New Caledonia comes the KAGU and rom New Guinea the CROWNED PIGEONS. From Africa, we have the WEAVER BIRDS and the TOURACOES. From America, we find the MIGRATORY THRUSH or AMERICAN ROBIN, the CARDINAL or VIRGINIAN NIGHTINGALE, the COLINS and the SUN-BITTERNS.

In the three small cages, placed in the wall at the end of the Aviary, will be found groups of some of our familiar British species.


And these are all the species cited in the more in-depth discussion:

Satin Bowerbird
(Ptilonorhynchus violaceus) - listed as Ptilonorhynchus holosericeus
Laughing Kookaburra (Dacelo novaeguineae) - listed as Dacelo gigantea
Budgerigar (Melopsittacus undulatus)
Cockatiel (Nymphicus hollandicus) - listed as Calopsitta novahollandiae
Wonga Pigeon (Leucosarcia melanoleuca) - listed as Leucosarcia picata
Common Bronzewing (Phaps chalcoptera)
Crested Pigeon (Ocyphaps lophotes)
Western Crowned Pigeon (Goura cristata) - listed as Goura coronata
Victoria Crowned Pigeon (Goura victoria) - listed as Goura victoriae
Crested Bobwhite (Colinus cristata) - listed as Eupsychortyx cristatus
Kagu (Rhynochetos jubatus)
Sunbittern (Eurypyga helias)

Does the guidebook mention the Passenger Pigeons or Carolina Parakeets? If so, what does it say about them?

It does not, although given the cited focus of the Western Aviary I rather suspect that this is where they will have been located.
 
What species of mongoose are even being referred to there?

Assumimg the i word mean mongoose, Gray mongoose, marsh mongoose and banded mongoose?

@aardvark250 is correct - these are indeed the taxa being referred to, as best as I can tell!

The old Western Aviary was behind the Mappin Terraces (i.e. between the Mappin Terraces and the Outer Circle road) in a part of the zoo no longer open to visitors.

Yes there was originally only one tunnel linking the north and south parts of the zoo.

The original tunnel, the East Tunnel, was designed by Decimus Burton and dates from 1829 / 30.

The newer tunnel, the West Tunnel, was built 1919 / 20 and was decorated with reproductions of famous prehistoric cave paintings in 1954.

I rather hoped you would come along with the answer to these two questions :)

Does the guide give any information about what was in the Carnivore Terrace (12/13)?

It does indeed :) it is referred to in the text as the Hyena and Bear Dens, and the following taxa are listed:

Striped Hyena (Hyaena hyaena)
Spotted Hyena (Crocuta crocuta)
European Brown Bear (Ursus arctos arctos)
Syrian Brown Bear (Ursus arctos syriacus)
Tibetan Black Bear (Ursus thibetanus thibetanus)
Japanese Black Bear (Ursus thibetanus japonicus)
Malayan Sun Bear (Helarctos malayanus)
Sloth Bear (Melursus ursinus)
Polar Bear (Ursus maritimus)
European Wolf (Canis lupus lupus)
Timber Wolf (Canis lupus occidentalis)

There is also mention of a bear pit (map entry 14) which held further European Brown Bear along with American Black Bear.
 
Day 4 - ZSL London Zoo (1877) – Javan Rhinoceros

full


Page count: 70 (including front cover, map and 5 pages of advertisments)
Photographs: None
Illustrations/diagrams: 20 illustrations throughout body of guidebook, plus several illustrations within advertisments
Layout: Comprehensive walkthrough account of collection.
Map: Included as part of body of guidebook

At the time of writing, this is the oldest UK guidebook in my collection by a fairly substantial margin, being the only 19th century item I own from the country; given the extreme rarity of those guidebooks released by London Zoo during the Victorian era, many of which are recorded in the master-list of UK guidebooks maintained by the Bartlett Society as having no known copies outside the ZSL library, it is one of the key cornerstones of my guidebook collection and one of the most valuable zoo-related items I own.

Many of the pre-WWII guidebooks issued by London Zoo contained a wide variety of advertisment material both prior to the main body of the text, and at the end of the text; this book is no exception, with adverts present for such products as "J. C. Eno's Fruit Salt", "Morson's Preparations of Pepsine" and "Epps' Breakfast Cocoa" along with promotion of various services and events in the London area; as such these guidebooks are a valuable snapshot not merely of zoo history, but also of social and commercial history.

full


However, of rather more relevance to the zoo historian - and any zoo enthusiast with an interest in the captive holding of now-extinct or critically endangered taxa - is the fact that this guidebook was released in the middle of a period where London Zoo was home to a vast array of species which have long-since been lost; at the time of publication, taxa such as Passenger Pigeon, Carolina Parakeet, the Indochinese Rhinoceros and the Syrian Wild Ass were all to be found at the zoo, and the last Falkland Island Wolf at the collection had died a mere year previously, with species still-extant today but on the brink of extinction such as Javan Rhinoceros and the Sumatran Rhinoceros also occurring at this time. As such, a particular highlight of this guidebook is the following segment discussing the various rhinoceros holdings at the zoo:

full


The quality of the guidebook as a whole is extremely good, representing a walkthrough account of the zoo and describing the species present in each section of the collection, with copious numbers of high-quality illustrations of select taxa dotted throughout the text, and concludes with a brief overview of the Zoological Society of London and the terms, conditions and benefits attached to becoming a Fellow of the Society. The general layout of these guidebooks - although the content and precise format would change over the years - would remain fairly standardised until the mid-1930s, with the most notable change over the course of this time being the introduction of photographs. This, of course, is something that should be discussed properly another day - at the time this particular guidebook was issued, the only images present within were illustrations and no photographic material was included, as photographs from this timespan are few-and-far-between; the best source for such information is most certainly the two editions of London Zoo from Old Photographs 1852-1914 by John Edwards - a book I very much recommend any zoo enthusiast seriously interested in the history of London Zoo should track down with some alacrity!

full


One of the other key aspects of this guidebook, of course, is the presence of a fairly-detailed map of the collection, located in the opening pages prior to the main body of the text commencing - in my experience, the provision of attractive and useful maps within their guidebooks is something that London Zoo has always done a pretty good job of achieving, even if this particular map is very much skewed towards the functional rather than the artistic.

full


I am fairly certain that those reading this post will have questions aplenty about this particular guidebook, given the fact I have given the briefest and most superficial overview here - I look forward to any and all such enquiries, and will tackle them to the best of my ability!
Interesting to note it was published by a commercial publisher, not by the Society. Also it states it is the only guidebook authorized by the Society, which begs the question, were there unauthorized guidebooks by other publishers available at the same time?
 
Also it states it is the only guidebook authorized by the Society, which begs the question, were there unauthorized guidebooks by other publishers available at the same time?

I believe that there *were* unauthorised guidebooks available during the 19th century as it happens - @Tim Brown or @Tim May are likely to be able to speak much more authoritatively on the subject, but at least one unauthorised edition (dated to 1866) is cited on the Bartlett Society master list.
 
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I believe that there *were* unauthorised guidebooks available during the 19th century as it happens - @Tim Brown or @Tim May are likely to be able to speak much more authoritatively on the subject, but at least one unauthorised edition (dated to 1866) is cited on the Bartlett Society master list.
That in itself speaks to the importance of the zoo at the time.
 
Striped Hyena (Hyaena hyaena)
Spotted Hyena (Crocuta crocuta)
European Brown Bear (Ursus arctos arctos)
Syrian Brown Bear (Ursus arctos syriacus)
Tibetan Black Bear (Ursus thibetanus thibetanus)
Japanese Black Bear (Ursus thibetanus japonicus)
Malayan Sun Bear (Helarctos malayanus)
Sloth Bear (Melursus ursinus)
Polar Bear (Ursus maritimus)
European Wolf (Canis lupus lupus)
Timber Wolf (Canis lupus occidentalis)

There is also mention of a bear pit (map entry 14) which held further European Brown Bear along with American Black Bear.


Japanese black bear is an interesting one. Because a lot of the rarity would probably because of colonialism(?), and Japanese was still a "closed" country at similar the time.
 
Because a lot of the rarity would probably because of colonialism(?), and Japanese was still a "closed" country at similar the time.

The Sakoku isolationist policy in Japan ended several years prior to the release of this guidebook, as a matter of fact, with various trade agreements and negotiations having taken place over the preceding decades; as such, I imagine that there is a decent chance the animals in question were diplomatic gifts and arrived as part of these negotiations. ZTL indicates that 0,2 individuals arrived in 1863, which would tally with these factors, as would the statement in the guidebook that the bears were "among several new and interesting acquisitions" from the country.
 
The Sakoku isolationist policy in Japan ended several years prior to the release of this guidebook, as a matter of fact, with various trade agreements and negotiations having taken place over the preceding decades; as such, I imagine that there is a decent chance the animals in question were diplomatic gifts and arrived as part of these negotiations. ZTL indicates that 0,2 individuals arrived in 1863, which would tally with these factors, as would the statement in the guidebook that the bears were "among several new and interesting acquisitions" from the country.
1877 also saw the publication of the 6th edition of the wonderfully named List of the Vertebrated Animals Now or Lately Living in the Zoological Gardens of London. This book records the purchase of the two female Japanese Bears on 1st April 1862. These were, in fact, the type specimens of Ursus japonicus (nowadays treated as a subspecies of U. thibetanus).
 
Looking at these very old London zoo maps from this eras guides always amazes me.

Presumably the scale referenced is accurate.

The space devoted to storks pheasants and cranes seems significantly larger than that given to the elephant house holding 5 rhino species, 2 elephant species and at least 1 tapir species! Presumably some of these species were in mixed holdings.

Whilst I would love to see some of these species I am pleased modern zoo practices have (largely) moved away from what appears to have been incredibly cramped conditions. I wonder what comparative enclosure size this elephant house gave compared to say the cassons?

The other thing I find interesting about these old maps is that they have not been influenced by the artistic influence of a marketing department. Meaning small enclosures are shown as such and there appears to be open areas and large walkways.

On a modern map (not necessarily ZSL) these are often merely denoted as a line making the enclosure with an adjusted/proportioned animal seem bigger and the zoo “full”.

For example the current ZSL map would suggest a penguin is larger than a silverback. Walkways and lawns are adorned with trees, statues etc. Again this could be attributed in part to changing attitudes to zoos and their target audience changing from scientific collection to family attraction. I don’t think the PR department at todays ZSL would sign off on the older, but possibly much more “real,” version…

Thanks TLD, enjoying these! How annoying someone has autographed it for you though!
 
This book records the purchase of the two female Japanese Bears on 1st April 1862. These were, in fact, the type specimens of Ursus japonicus (nowadays treated as a subspecies of U. thibetanus).

Makes sense, and still serves as a reflection of the aforementioned process of Japan slowly opening up to trade and commerce with the West which was taking place at the time :)

Thanks TLD, enjoying these! How annoying someone has autographed it for you though!

To be honest, I don't mind that kind of thing at all :) it's all part of the history of the item, reflecting the fact it has passed through however many pairs of hands before reaching myself.

That said, if the random hand of chance selects the correct guidebook in my collection, I may well end up writing about an item I picked up last year which nearly killed me thanks to *how* it had been damaged :P
 
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