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

Interesting! I left Chessington zoo in 1963, to emigrate to Australia. I kept many of the species named including the Drills, Hippo, Polar bears, Cranes , Storks etc., Highland cattle, Bison, (a favourite of mine that would come to be patted and stroked), Ankole bull, ( these two produced the first hybrid cross, after the Ankole broke through into the female Bison pen one night!), Oryx, Camel, (I once took Sheena, the Arabian camel, to the film studios at Elstree, and had to be dressed up as an Arab, to lead the camel through the film set, for an episode of Richard the Lionheart. Great! I got paid as an extra!). I cared for the both the Tiger and Lions, but the third one was called Suzie at that time, so not sure if the name was changed or if there was a new female added. One of the Bateleurs was tamed, and I often took this bird out on a T shaped perch. I notice that the Coatis were still named Coati Mundi. For years I kept saying this was wrong, but the management would not listen. Several other species were wrongly named, but I could not get any of them changed either! Your posts brought back many happy memories.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Day 23: Cincinnati Zoo (1928) - Tiger and Asian Elephant

full


Page count: 144
Photographs: c.94 black-and-white photographs
Illustrations/diagrams: N/A
Layout: Comprehensive walkthrough account of collection, followed by discussion of the history of the zoo
Map: Located within introductory text of guidebook


The first North American guidebook of the thread this time, and moreover an item from a zoological collection which a reasonably-large number of Zoochatters have visited at one point or another; as such I have hope that this post will prove to be a fruitful one in terms of the overall level of feedback, questions and remarks it will produce. It is worth digressing for a moment to note that this guidebook fell into my possession fairly recently, as a result of a zoo enthusiast based in Scotland - who had spent many years in the USA, and therefore had accumulated many North American items seldom seen on this side of the Atlantic - deciding to sell their collection of guidebooks on eBay over the course of last year. I suspect many British and European zoo enthusiasts increased their own collections substantially as a result.

The first thing apparent on handling this item is how well-produced it is; the interior paper quality is extremely fine and pleasant to the touch, the cover is printed on glossy, faux-level paper, and overall it has held together very well for an item which is approaching a century old - certainly it is in much better condition than those guides of equal age I own from various European and Australian collections!

Given the fact that I suspect that the contents of this guidebook might be of particular interest, but for obvious reasons only have a certain amount of scope to reproduce images from the guidebook within this post, I have included the below scans of the detailed contents page to give those reading this thread a clear idea of precisely what can be found within - this will hopefully give people a starting point from which to make requests for further information and any additional scans which would aid discussion.

full


full


Beyond the contents page, a series of small segments covering a range of disparate points follows; firstly, a page explaining the basic taxonomic and zoological terms used within the body of the guidebook, such as the five basic groupings within the vertebrates; secondly, a relatively detailed biography of Sol A Stephan, the general manager of the zoo; thirdly, a section providing a variety of key information about the collection (public transport links, admission rates, details regarding provision of wheelchairs, umbrellas and other such items, and so forth); and finally, a small map of the collection as a whole - an image of which is visible below.

full


After this point, as can be seen in the above image, an exhibit-by-exhibit and species-by-species walkthrough account of the zoo as a whole follows, comprising much of the main body of the guidebook. These are presented in an order matching the general route which was suggested to the visitor to the collection at the time of publication, often include comprehensive species lists, and are largely accompanied by high-quality photographs either depicting some of the species under discussion, or the houses and exhibits within which they were held. The text throughout this segment of the guidebook strikes me as particularly informative, interesting and reaching a pretty high standard of quality - especially where the descriptions of building design and construction are concerned, reaching levels of detail which I have seldom seen in other zoo guidebooks. For instance, the following is the description provided for the Monkey House:

This is a large, round building, which is built of stone, iron and glass. It is sixty feet in diameter, and the distance from the floor to the large glass dome in the center of the roof is forty feet. This building was completely remodeled in 1922. The sixteen cages are each provided with a large skylight to assure an abundance of sunlight, which is necessary for the health of the animals. The interior walls are of reinforced concrete. The most modern types of ventilation and heating systems have been installed. The heating system will maintain an even temperature of seventy degrees. The floors of the cages are paved with a special brick composed partly of cork and asphalt. The cork insures the proper degree of warmth required for the monkeys, The floors at the same time can be kept clean and sanitary at all times.

If modern-day zoo guidebooks provided this level of detail about the design and construction of animal houses and exhibits, with a resulting increase in the primary resources available to those interested in participating in the sub-forum in question, we would probably have a better standard of posts over in SpecZoo!

full


Unsurprisingly enough, given the significance of the species and its extinction at Cincinnati a mere 14 years prior to the publication of this guidebook, the lengthy segment discussing the Aviary Block digresses from the walkthrough account of species held within to briefly discuss the Passenger Pigeon once held within this area of the zoo, as seen above. This represents one of several points in the walkthrough account of species and exhibits where attention is paid to the heritage of the zoo and the way in which it had developed over the half-century or so since it had first opened in 1875; as will be discussed anon, this guidebook *does* also contain a segment devoted to the history of the zoo - something which, as my posts in this thread have already indicated, is somewhat more commonplace - but the inclusion of notes on the development and history of a zoological collection within species/exhibit accounts is vanishingly-rare these days.

One of the other notable examples of this trend comes somewhat later in the walkthrough account, where specific note is made of a particular free-standing cage which was the first at the zoo, and which at the time of publication was kept well-maintained as a point of historical importance; I rather suspect that nearly a century later, it will have long-since been removed.... but I would love to be proven incorrect on this point!

full


At the end of the exhibit-by-exhibit walkthrough account of the zoo, a short section follows on the various features provided at the collection beyond the zoological attractions; the claim is made that "Cincinnati Zoo is the only Zoological Garden in the United States combining high-class entertainment features with its zoological collection", something which I find somewhat difficult to believe.... perhaps the key is the use of the term "high-class", and this is a not-so-veiled dig at the attractions found at other zoological collections? Within this section, mention is made of the events held at the Zoo Pavilion, Restaurant and Opera House, open-air dancing venues, ice skating rinks, theatres, baseball fields, and a variety of other such attractions. Again, not knowing as much about Cincinnati Zoo as I perhaps should, I find myself wondering how many of these have survived to living memory, let alone the present day.

full


The final major segment of the guidebook comprises a fairly-substantial account of the history of Cincinnati Zoo from 1875-1928, going into rather a lot of detail about the circumstances which led to the establishment of the collection, early trials and tribulations experienced as the zoo started to grow and expand, and details of the financial and political manoeuvring which would ultimately result in the formation of the Cincinnati Zoological Park Association and the purchase of the zoo from the previous owners; as such this guidebook contains much information which may well be unknown to the casual zoo enthusiast, certainly one such as myself who has never visited the collection and "knows" it only through those aspects most-often discussed in the present day. As I have noted on multiple occasions in this thread and elsewhere on the forum, my interest in zoo guidebooks as historical documents is of equal import to my interest in the zoological collections themselves, and as such, historical reviews and accounts such as this are always a massive bonus when weighing up the relative merits of a guidebook.

Beyond here, the final dozen or so pages before the (extensive and methodically-referenced) index to the guidebook comprise a series of photographs taken throughout the collection over the years, covering a fairly wide and random selection of subjects, interspersed with around sixteen advertisements for various businesses operating in the Cincinatti area and Ohio as a whole; unlike some of the other guidebooks we have covered so far, which contain advertisements heavily aimed towards families and children, these are very much more akin to the advertisement material found within the 1877 London Zoo guidebook covered some weeks ago - something that I suspect can be attributed in large part to these guidebooks being published at a time when zoological collections were viewed with a much more sombre and serious outlook. Certainly one cannot imagine a zoo guidebook published in more recent years containing adverts promoting asbestos roofing, multiple rival plumbing companies and automobile interior upholsterers, to name but a few! However, one particular advert found within this section strikes me as particularly worthy of mention - promotion of the animal import business which was still actively maintained and managed by the Hagenbeck family at the time of publication, and which had offices in New Jersey alongside their offices in Germany:

full


Another of the advertisements on this particular double-page spread - and the other reason I chose to scan these particular pages in - promotes the services of the printing house which was responsible for the publication of this guidebook, something that I thought worth highlighting given the discussion on this general subject which took place some weeks ago between myself, @MRJ and @Coelacanth18 . On a related point, it should be noted that this guidebook is specifically cited as having been written by Sol A Stephan, the aforementioned general director of the zoo at the time of publication!

Overall, I feel like this guidebook is probably one of the best possible options which could have been randomly selected, as far as a first look at an item from North America is concerned; I suspect I have made it fairly obvious how much I like this guidebook, and the degree to which I feel it provides an excellent and in-depth look at the collection to which it pertains. Now, I open the floor to anyone and everyone who feels they have something to contribute, or who would like to request further information on any aspect of this guidebook.
 
We can very rarely find in guidebooks information about the death of individual animals, especially in such spectacular circumstances.
 
Even more interesting situation is in Plzen Zoo first guidebook from 1986. None of the photos in the entire guide were taken in Plzen Zoo (majority was from Dvur Kralove).

IIRC at least some were taken in Plzen, but I didn't go through it for a long time, so I can't say for sure
 
Interesting! I left Chessington zoo in 1963, to emigrate to Australia. I kept many of the species named including the Drills, Hippo, Polar bears, Cranes , Storks etc., Highland cattle, Bison, (a favourite of mine that would come to be patted and stroked), Ankole bull, ( these two produced the first hybrid cross, after the Ankole broke through into the female Bison pen one night!), Oryx, Camel, (I once took Sheena, the Arabian camel, to the film studios at Elstree, and had to be dressed up as an Arab, to lead the camel through the film set, for an episode of Richard the Lionheart. Great! I got paid as an extra!). I cared for the both the Tiger and Lions, but the third one was called Suzie at that time, so not sure if the name was changed or if there was a new female added. One of the Bateleurs was tamed, and I often took this bird out on a T shaped perch. I notice that the Coatis were still named Coati Mundi. For years I kept saying this was wrong, but the management would not listen. Several other species were wrongly named, but I could not get any of them changed either! Your posts brought back many happy memories.

Just highlighting the above post by Terry Thomas, which was left as a comment on one of the gallery items and which I've managed to import into this thread on the grounds that it merited a wider audience :)
 
a small map of the collection as a whole - an image of which is visible below.

It's very funny to me that they are in the time period in which parking lots existed, but that the ones they had were very small and one of them also functioned as a sports field. They also call them "auto parking lot" and "auto lot", which is not the common terminology used here in the present day... it's interesting to see how even minor details like that reveal other historical changes!

For instance, the following is the description provided for the Monkey House:

This is a large, round building, which is built of stone, iron and glass. It is sixty feet in diameter, and the distance from the floor to the large glass dome in the center of the roof is forty feet. This building was completely remodeled in 1922. The sixteen cages are each provided with a large skylight to assure an abundance of sunlight, which is necessary for the health of the animals. The interior walls are of reinforced concrete. The most modern types of ventilation and heating systems have been installed. The heating system will maintain an even temperature of seventy degrees. The floors of the cages are paved with a special brick composed partly of cork and asphalt. The cork insures the proper degree of warmth required for the monkeys, The floors at the same time can be kept clean and sanitary at all times.

Incredibly, this building still exists; it is the current reptile house and the oldest operating exhibit building in an American zoo. I knew it used to house monkeys, but never knew any details beyond that.

It's really interesting to see the level of detail with which husbandry was considered even back in 1928; the attention paid to the importance of sunlight, ventilation and heating systems, and floor construction all suggest the zoo took a scientific approach to its animal care (though whether they had the actual details right could be a discussion of its own). Another example of this approach is their noting that they use Latin names on their signage "in accordance with a uniform practice among scientists."

Another detail I noticed in the historical page is the fact that some of the zoo's land was sold off for housing subdivisions to pay off debt in the early years... I'd be very interested to know how much land they initially held, and how much larger the zoo would be today if they hadn't had to do so!

Any additional information about species held would be of interest to me, but in particular do they note what the "Summer Reptile Cage" is and what they held in it?
 
it's interesting to see how even minor details like that reveal other historical changes!

This being one of the biggest attractions of collecting antiquarian zoo guidebooks, as I have noted in the past!

Another detail I noticed in the historical page is the fact that some of the zoo's land was sold off for housing subdivisions to pay off debt in the early years... I'd be very interested to know how much land they initially held, and how much larger the zoo would be today if they hadn't had to do so!

Reading between the lines of text deeper into the guidebook, and material posted elsewhere online about the modern-day collection, I have the strong suspicion that these subdivisions were subsequently purchased back for the zoo - or alternatively, that Cincinnati Zoo has purchased sufficient areas of land surrounding the original extent of the site over nearly 150 years to more than compensate for the land lost through these sales. The historical segment states fairly clearly that prior to any sales of land, the original zoo covered approximately 67 acres; however, the modern-day Cincinnati Zoo appears to cover around 75 acres!

Any additional information about species held would be of interest to me, but in particular do they note what the "Summer Reptile Cage" is and what they held in it?

The introduction to the relevant section reads as follows:

This is west of the Club House and usually contains several varieties of harmless snakes, such as the black snake, the coach whip snake, the garter snake, Say's king snake, the pine snake, and the indigo snake.


The guidebook then goes on to explain the basic divisions within the snake family as a whole, before giving species accounts for the precise taxa present at the time of publication.

Species cited as held within this area are as follows (taxonomy updated to present):

Timber Rattlesnake
(Crotalus horridus)
Eastern Diamondback (Crotalus adamanteus)
Black Snake (Pantherophis obsoletus)
Eastern Indigo Snake (Drymarchon couperi)
Scarlet Kingsnake (Lampropeltis elapsoides)
Corn Snake (Pantherophis guttatus)
Pine Snake (Pituophis melanoleucus)
Eastern Ratsnake (Pantherophis alleghaniensis)
Eastern Garter Snake (Thamnophis sirtalis)
Coach Whipsnake (Masticophis flagellum)
Smooth Green Snake (Opheodrys vernalis)
 
Really enjoying this thread , bringing back memories of long-closed collections that I visited - Riber Castle , Southampton and Penscynor , the latter being my 'local zoo' .

I first visited Penscynor when it had occasional open days for what was then a private collection . My last visit was after it had formally closed and the stock was being dispersed . I got to know the last Curator , Rob Colley , quite well . He did a lot to improve the collection , with improved housing , labelling , some good guide books and involvement in breeding programmes .

In the days of the featured guide books I guess it was acceptable to hand-rear Chimpanzees , I do not think any were mother-reared . Some of the older housing was not too secure and there were escapes , I am pretty certain that 2 of the fairly large young males had to be shot when they got near to the adjoining primary school after escaping . There was a threat to euthanise the Chimps when the collection closed , no Zoos were interested in mostly hand-reared animals . What was then a animal rescue centre , now the Wales Ape and Monkey Sanctuary , stepped in and took the Chimps and Gibbons . The substantial outside Chimp cage which was fairly new was dismantled and moved . What became of some of the the rest of what was quite a substantial primate collection is less clear . A big breeding group of Sooty Mangabey , some of which had come from London Zoo , disappeared , with no reports of them being moved to another known collection .

There was a Woolly Monkey in the collection from the early days . When Herbert Dornbrack became Curator , after moving from Banham , he brought with him his personally owned big group of Woollys , along with other rare primates . Apart from a pair of Woollys , the rest moved on when he left .

The 'tame' animals included a Pelican which could be quite scary for small children when encountered on a path . After it died , it was stuffed and the preserved specimen could be seen . A number of Gibbons , amongst them a Pileated were kept tethered in trees during the day .

The Alpine Slide , with Chairlift up the hill , was very popular and brought in a lot of visitors .
 
Day 24: ZSL London Zoo (1907) - Illustrated Official Guide to the London Zoological Society's Gardens in Regents Park

full


Page count: 128 (including 16 pages of advertisements)
Photographs: 50 black-and-white photographs
Illustrations/diagrams: Several illustrations within advertisements
Layout: Comprehensive walkthrough account of collection.
Map: Fold-out double-sided map after advertisements at front of guidebook; one side showing collection map; one side showing local street plan and directions to zoo.

Another rather old and historically-significant guidebook this time round; with an item which was published exactly thirty years after the last publication we discussed from this collection. As such, it provides an interesting look at the various ways in which London Zoo had changed and developed in the years following 1877, and moreover - through the various examples of advertisement material provided at the beginning and end of the guidebook - gives a general feel for the wider changes in society as the Victorian era passed into the Edwardian era. As the front cover shows, this particular item represents the fifth edition of a completely overhauled and redesigned iteration of the London Zoo guidebook, all of which would share the same general interior format and design, and which were written by the secretary of the Zoological Society of London, Sir Peter Chalmers Mitchell; the first of these had been published 1904, but this general format would survive with minor adjustments and updates until the 32nd edition, not long before the outbreak of World War II. Therefore, this item represents the early years of an uninterrupted run of guidebooks presenting London Zoo across nearly four decades; I own several guidebooks from those that follow, so I may well have the opportunity to present some of the changes which the collection experienced over the pre-war years within this thread.

full


As was the case for the 1877 guidebook, along with all other London Zoo guidebooks issued in the Victorian and Edwardian eras, the pages immediately preceding the main body of the text comprise a wide range of advertisement material, promoting a wide range of products and services - many of which, as can be seen from the above scan, were medical in nature and often rather dangerous when viewed with a modern-day eye! I have chosen to highlight the above double-page batch of adverts in particular, largely due to just how egregiously fraudulent one of the products in question really is, even by the standards of the time; Clarke's Blood Mixture, which here is claimed to represent a permanent cure for "Eczema, Scrofula, Scurvey, Bad Legs, Abscesses, Boils, Pimples, Blotches, Sores, Blood Poison, Glandular Swellings, Rheumatism, Gout, and all Skin and Blood Disease", avoided the "normal" route of such pseudo-medical remedies at the time - to wit, usually comprising truly impressive quantities of opium, cannabis, cocaine and alcohol, a combination which would not so much cure all ailments as cause the patient to cease to care about said ailments - by quite literally comprising nothing more than sugar water, with trace quantities of chloroform and ammonia added. It is worth reminding anyone who lacks background knowledge in old-fashioned medical terminology, incidentally, that "scrofula" is a now-disused term for lymphatic tuberculosis. Amazingly, this product was successful enough that not only is it advertised in the vast majority of pre-war guidebooks for London Zoo in my collection, but it remained on-sale within the United Kingdom until the 1960s!

full


This is not to say, of course, that all of the advertisements found within this second represented medical or pseudo-medical remedies; among the other products and services advertised among these pages are taxidermists, household cleaning products, purveyors of food and drink, and perhaps most interestingly for those reading this thread, the above feature promoting the services of John Daniel Hamlyn, the animal dealer and naturalist who supplied London Zoo and several other zoological collections, pet stores and private menageries during the timespan in question, and for whom the Hamlyn's Guenon is named.

The main body of the text, as already indicated, comprises a detailed walkthrough account of the collection, discussing each major house or exhibit in turn and highlighting various of the species held within, following a suggested route throughout. Although the text contains somewhat fewer species of note when compared to the previous London Zoo guidebook which we discussed some weeks ago, and cites the presence of several species which had either been absent for decades (Javan Rhinoceros and Syrian Wild Ass), had left the collection immediately beforehand (Bubal Hartebeest, Thylacine) or were otherwise not held in the collection at the time of publication (Pangolin), the general level of detail is nonetheless extremely high, with some aspects far surpassing the 1877 guidebook.

full


full


For instance, the above map located at the start of the species/exhibit accounts, along with the accompanying contents page for the guidebook as a whole - which occurs a few pages previously, in the middle of the advertisement section - compliment one another rather well, with the map comprehensively labelled and numbered to indication the location of the various species and exhibits in question. The contents page is comprehensive enough that I hope it will serve a similar purpose within this thread to the contents pages I included in my post discussing the 1928 Cincinnati Zoo guidebook; to wit, that it will provide a jumping-off point for people to ask questions about the contents of this guidebook, species which are mentioned within and so forth, thereby ensuring that the interests of those reading this thread are served as best as possible. Similarly, I hope that people find something to discuss in the contents of the map - whether it is discussing the modern-day location of exhibits mentioned within, or (unlikely though I suspect this is) the memories of anyone who remembered seeing some of these exhibits whilst they still existed, assuming that some did survive into living memory.

full


One major change in general layout and design between this guidebook and the 1877 edition we previously discussed, of course, is the near-total absence of illustrations and their replacement by dozens of black-and-white photographs depicting a variety of the species and exhibits present at the collection at the time of publication; from one point of view, the loss of illustrations is something of a pity given how attractive those in the 1877 edition were, but the additional level of educational value inherent in being able to see the exhibits present at the collection more than compensates for this. Of particular note in the above image is the reference to the Yellow-eyed Penguin held at the collection at the time of publication; 115 years on, this is still the last time the species was held in a European collection to the best of my knowledge, and it is also probably the most unusual species mentioned in the text which *was* held within the collection at the time without any shadow of a doubt.

full


As previously noted, the walkthrough species/exhibit accounts all reach a very high standard; perhaps not quite as good as those found in the Zoo Berlin guidebooks of the time, or indeed the Cincinnati Zoo guidebook of which I spoke yesterday, but nonetheless representing one of the gold-standards for informational content within a zoo guidebook in my opinion; the two selected double-page spreads I have scanned and posted above represent just a small glance at the whole, but represent a fairly good cross-section of what it has to offer given the fact that one includes an exhibit photograph, whilst another contains an image more specifically focused on the animals within.

Beyond here, a complete index to the species accounts is provided; I will upload this to the gallery and post it outside of the main review post anon - this will allow people to reference it and hopefully stimulate discussion and queries, without overly-swamping the text here. I suspect that further pages of advertisement material may once have been present here too; however, the binding of my copy is damaged here and it is unclear whether anything further was indeed present. All that can be said for certain is that the interior and exterior back page *does* contain material of this sort.

Overall, then, an excellent guidebook and one which represents a fairly important historical document for anyone interested in the growth and development of London Zoo in the early decades of the 20th century - and certainly one of the key items within my overall collection of zoo guidebooks, given the fact that (along with my collections of Tierpark Berlin, Zoo Berlin and Vogelpark Walsrode guidebooks) my various 20th century London Zoo guidebooks represent a significantly large fraction of the whole.
 
Really enjoying this thread , bringing back memories of long-closed collections that I visited - Riber Castle , Southampton and Penscynor , the latter being my 'local zoo' .

I first visited Penscynor when it had occasional open days for what was then a private collection . My last visit was after it had formally closed and the stock was being dispersed . I got to know the last Curator , Rob Colley , quite well . He did a lot to improve the collection , with improved housing , labelling , some good guide books and involvement in breeding programmes .

In the days of the featured guide books I guess it was acceptable to hand-rear Chimpanzees , I do not think any were mother-reared . Some of the older housing was not too secure and there were escapes , I am pretty certain that 2 of the fairly large young males had to be shot when they got near to the adjoining primary school after escaping . There was a threat to euthanise the Chimps when the collection closed , no Zoos were interested in mostly hand-reared animals . What was then a animal rescue centre , now the Wales Ape and Monkey Sanctuary , stepped in and took the Chimps and Gibbons . The substantial outside Chimp cage which was fairly new was dismantled and moved . What became of some of the the rest of what was quite a substantial primate collection is less clear . A big breeding group of Sooty Mangabey , some of which had come from London Zoo , disappeared , with no reports of them being moved to another known collection .

There was a Woolly Monkey in the collection from the early days . When Herbert Dornbrack became Curator , after moving from Banham , he brought with him his personally owned big group of Woollys , along with other rare primates . Apart from a pair of Woollys , the rest moved on when he left .

The 'tame' animals included a Pelican which could be quite scary for small children when encountered on a path . After it died , it was stuffed and the preserved specimen could be seen . A number of Gibbons , amongst them a Pileated were kept tethered in trees during the day .

The Alpine Slide , with Chairlift up the hill , was very popular and brought in a lot of visitors .

Excellent - I was rather hoping you would return to the site and see these posts, as I knew you were familiar with the collection and could lend some valuable insights :) welcome back! Any further thoughts or feedback you have on other collections discussed, or collections yet to come, will naturally be more than welcome.

It is a damn shame that Sooty Mangabey group disappeared into the ether (almost certainly PTS due to lack of interest in taking them I suspect, barring the pair which went to Newquay) given the fact it is a rather nice species, and one I have zero recollection of having seen despite doing so at Flamingo Land as a small child!
 
Those were the days: not only a lion house, an antelope house, an insect house, several monkey houses and about a million aviaries, but also a swine house, gazelles paddocks, a rodent house, kestrel aviaries, and even squirrel and civet houses.
 
Those were the days: not only a lion house, an antelope house, an insect house, several monkey houses and about a million aviaries, but also a swine house, gazelles paddocks, a rodent house, kestrel aviaries, and even squirrel and civet houses.

Of course those were the days of the real stamp collections, and animal welfare or allowing animals to perform as much of their natural behavior as possible wasn't of that great, if of any concern in those days. In that respect I definitely do not look back super-fondly on those days. But I do envy the attention that was paid to animal groups that are now not as commonly represented or not as popular in zoos.
 
Of particular note in the above image is the reference to the Yellow-eyed Penguin held at the collection at the time of publication; 115 years on, this is still the last time the species was held in a European collection to the best of my knowledge, and it is also probably the most unusual species mentioned in the text which *was* held within the collection at the time without any shadow of a doubt.
I have a set of animal encyclopedias from c.1920 which includes a photo of that bird at the zoo.
 
Day 25: Stazione Zoologica di Napoli (1953) - A Brief Guide to the Naples Aquarium

full


Page count: 25 (including inner rear cover)
Photographs: N/A
Illustrations/diagrams: c.32 illustrations
Layout: Comprehensive walkthrough account of collection.
Map: N/A


An interesting little item this time round, for a collection which I know less about than I would like; the guidebooks issued by Naples Aquarium in German, Italian and French during this timespan were fairly weighty volumes, covering around a hundred pages and providing a detailed tank-by-tank walkthrough account of the collection, including diagrams of the vast majority of species held. Unfortunately, I have as yet been unable to add any of these guidebooks to my collection, so I do not know what other content can be found within; however, around a year ago I stumbled across this oddity in a Newcastle charity shop and immediately snapped it up. It was immediately apparent that this English translation - which until that point I was entirely unaware existed - is much shorter and is best viewed as a heavily-abridged summary of the walkthrough segment of the aforementioned guidebooks.

full


Each tank within the collection is described in a brief but fairly detailed and informative fashion, summarising some of the species held within - generally only listing them to genus level - and accompanied by simplified line drawings of select taxa, presented with scale bars to show their relative size. One thing that particularly interests me is the fact that the range of species represented in this guidebook - and hence, allegedly displayed at the aquarium at the time of publication - is fairly wide and comprehensive given the restricted scope of the collection; it is probable that the precise contents of the aquarium very much varied depending on availability, the husbandry skills of the time and various other factors, but nonetheless an aquarium which (even in a heavily abridged version of the guidebook) draws particular attention to species such as tunicates, tubeworms, corals and so forth strikes me as far more interesting than the vast number of commercialised, generic aquariums of the Sea Life sort which are the norm today.

Given the brevity of this guidebook, and the general format, I am rather tempted to reproduce the entirety within this thread - it is an unusual item which merits preservation, and being able to read the contents of the guidebook for oneself is far superior than the scanty summary I could provide, doubtless cannibalising much of said contents in the process. For now, however, I present a handful of scans showing various example pages from this item.

full


full


full


full


If there is any interest in my providing further scans from the guidebook, or answering questions about the contents of those sections I have omitted, I will happily do so. In the meantime, I feel fairly confident in stating that despite its brevity, this *is* one of the most interesting items in my collection, and that seeking out one of the full-length guidebooks from this aquarium is among my targets for the future.
 
Last edited:
Similarly, I hope that people find something to discuss in the contents of the map - whether it is discussing the modern-day location of exhibits mentioned within, or (unlikely though I suspect this is) the memories of anyone who remembered seeing some of these exhibits whilst they still existed, assuming that some did survive into living memory
A number of the exhibits featured on the 1907 London Zoo map did survive into living memory.

For example, I recall the following:-

Southern Aviary (no. 8 on map)
Sealion Pond (no. 9)
Antelope House (no. 13)
Lion House (no. 12)
Deer & Cattle Sheds (no. 32)
Pelicans (no. 18)
Eastern Aviary (no. 19)
Hippopotamus House (no. 60)
Tortoise House (no. 34) (although I remember it as the Humming Bird House)

I'm sure many other ZooChatters will remember some of these too.

And of course some of the structures still survive:-

Giraffe House (no. 62)
Stork & Ostrich House (no. 5)
Clock Tower (no. 26)
Three Island Pond (no. 36)
Reptile House (no. 33) (now the Bird House / Blackburn Pavilion)
 
Giraffe House (no. 62)

Reptile House (no. 33) (now the Bird House / Blackburn Pavilion)

Ah, excellent - from the photographs in this guidebook and some of the others from this time, I suspected this was the case for these, but wasn't certain if they were the original buildings or merely similar ones on same foot-plan.

Stork & Ostrich House (no. 5)

I'm having trouble placing this building in the modern London Zoo - which exhibit/structure is it?
 
I visited this aquarium in 2002. I think it looked a lot like it was in the 19th century. I even suspect that amphoras in the moray tank are originally ancient, in these times it was probably cheaper than use a new copies.
My oldest guide from this place is from 1892 and it is third English edition.
 
Ah, excellent - from the photographs in this guidebook and some of the others from this time, I suspected this was the case for these, but wasn't certain if they were the original buildings or merely similar ones on same foot-plan ?
The Giraffe House dates back to 1836/7 although it was extensively refurbished in the early 1960s.

Construction of the old Reptile House in 1882/3 was largely funded by the sale of the famous elephant "Jumbo". It was converted into the Bird House after the current Reptile House was built in 1927. Until comparatively recently, when it was refurbished and renamed the Blackburn Pavilion, you could still see patterns on the floor of the Bird House that showed where the crocodile pools used to be. (And manatees were sometimes housed in these pools too.)

I'm having trouble placing this building in the modern London Zoo - which exhibit/structure is it?
"Maguari" beat me in responding to this question.

The old Stork and Ostrich House is a very flexible building that has housed many species over the years. In addition to ostriches and other ratite birds, storks and other wading birds, I recall it housing pudu, musk deer, giant anteaters, giant armadillo, anoa....Long before my time but, going back many years, giant forest hogs too!
 
Last edited:
Day 24: ZSL London Zoo (1907) - Illustrated Official Guide to the London Zoological Society's Gardens in Regents Park

full


Page count: 128 (including 16 pages of advertisements)
Photographs: 50 black-and-white photographs
Illustrations/diagrams: Several illustrations within advertisements
Layout: Comprehensive walkthrough account of collection.
Map: Fold-out double-sided map after advertisements at front of guidebook; one side showing collection map; one side showing local street plan and directions to zoo.

Another rather old and historically-significant guidebook this time round; with an item which was published exactly thirty years after the last publication we discussed from this collection. As such, it provides an interesting look at the various ways in which London Zoo had changed and developed in the years following 1877, and moreover - through the various examples of advertisement material provided at the beginning and end of the guidebook - gives a general feel for the wider changes in society as the Victorian era passed into the Edwardian era. As the front cover shows, this particular item represents the fifth edition of a completely overhauled and redesigned iteration of the London Zoo guidebook, all of which would share the same general interior format and design, and which were written by the secretary of the Zoological Society of London, Sir Peter Chalmers Mitchell; the first of these had been published 1904, but this general format would survive with minor adjustments and updates until the 32nd edition, not long before the outbreak of World War II. Therefore, this item represents the early years of an uninterrupted run of guidebooks presenting London Zoo across nearly four decades; I own several guidebooks from those that follow, so I may well have the opportunity to present some of the changes which the collection experienced over the pre-war years within this thread.

full


As was the case for the 1877 guidebook, along with all other London Zoo guidebooks issued in the Victorian and Edwardian eras, the pages immediately preceding the main body of the text comprise a wide range of advertisement material, promoting a wide range of products and services - many of which, as can be seen from the above scan, were medical in nature and often rather dangerous when viewed with a modern-day eye! I have chosen to highlight the above double-page batch of adverts in particular, largely due to just how egregiously fraudulent one of the products in question really is, even by the standards of the time; Clarke's Blood Mixture, which here is claimed to represent a permanent cure for "Eczema, Scrofula, Scurvey, Bad Legs, Abscesses, Boils, Pimples, Blotches, Sores, Blood Poison, Glandular Swellings, Rheumatism, Gout, and all Skin and Blood Disease", avoided the "normal" route of such pseudo-medical remedies at the time - to wit, usually comprising truly impressive quantities of opium, cannabis, cocaine and alcohol, a combination which would not so much cure all ailments as cause the patient to cease to care about said ailments - by quite literally comprising nothing more than sugar water, with trace quantities of chloroform and ammonia added. It is worth reminding anyone who lacks background knowledge in old-fashioned medical terminology, incidentally, that "scrofula" is a now-disused term for lymphatic tuberculosis. Amazingly, this product was successful enough that not only is it advertised in the vast majority of pre-war guidebooks for London Zoo in my collection, but it remained on-sale within the United Kingdom until the 1960s!

full


This is not to say, of course, that all of the advertisements found within this second represented medical or pseudo-medical remedies; among the other products and services advertised among these pages are taxidermists, household cleaning products, purveyors of food and drink, and perhaps most interestingly for those reading this thread, the above feature promoting the services of John Daniel Hamlyn, the animal dealer and naturalist who supplied London Zoo and several other zoological collections, pet stores and private menageries during the timespan in question, and for whom the Hamlyn's Guenon is named.

The main body of the text, as already indicated, comprises a detailed walkthrough account of the collection, discussing each major house or exhibit in turn and highlighting various of the species held within, following a suggested route throughout. Although the text contains somewhat fewer species of note when compared to the previous London Zoo guidebook which we discussed some weeks ago, and cites the presence of several species which had either been absent for decades (Javan Rhinoceros and Syrian Wild Ass), had left the collection immediately beforehand (Bubal Hartebeest, Thylacine) or were otherwise not held in the collection at the time of publication (Pangolin), the general level of detail is nonetheless extremely high, with some aspects far surpassing the 1877 guidebook.

full


full


For instance, the above map located at the start of the species/exhibit accounts, along with the accompanying contents page for the guidebook as a whole - which occurs a few pages previously, in the middle of the advertisement section - compliment one another rather well, with the map comprehensively labelled and numbered to indication the location of the various species and exhibits in question. The contents page is comprehensive enough that I hope it will serve a similar purpose within this thread to the contents pages I included in my post discussing the 1928 Cincinnati Zoo guidebook; to wit, that it will provide a jumping-off point for people to ask questions about the contents of this guidebook, species which are mentioned within and so forth, thereby ensuring that the interests of those reading this thread are served as best as possible. Similarly, I hope that people find something to discuss in the contents of the map - whether it is discussing the modern-day location of exhibits mentioned within, or (unlikely though I suspect this is) the memories of anyone who remembered seeing some of these exhibits whilst they still existed, assuming that some did survive into living memory.

full


One major change in general layout and design between this guidebook and the 1877 edition we previously discussed, of course, is the near-total absence of illustrations and their replacement by dozens of black-and-white photographs depicting a variety of the species and exhibits present at the collection at the time of publication; from one point of view, the loss of illustrations is something of a pity given how attractive those in the 1877 edition were, but the additional level of educational value inherent in being able to see the exhibits present at the collection more than compensates for this. Of particular note in the above image is the reference to the Yellow-eyed Penguin held at the collection at the time of publication; 115 years on, this is still the last time the species was held in a European collection to the best of my knowledge, and it is also probably the most unusual species mentioned in the text which *was* held within the collection at the time without any shadow of a doubt.

full


As previously noted, the walkthrough species/exhibit accounts all reach a very high standard; perhaps not quite as good as those found in the Zoo Berlin guidebooks of the time, or indeed the Cincinnati Zoo guidebook of which I spoke yesterday, but nonetheless representing one of the gold-standards for informational content within a zoo guidebook in my opinion; the two selected double-page spreads I have scanned and posted above represent just a small glance at the whole, but represent a fairly good cross-section of what it has to offer given the fact that one includes an exhibit photograph, whilst another contains an image more specifically focused on the animals within.

Beyond here, a complete index to the species accounts is provided; I will upload this to the gallery and post it outside of the main review post anon - this will allow people to reference it and hopefully stimulate discussion and queries, without overly-swamping the text here. I suspect that further pages of advertisement material may once have been present here too; however, the binding of my copy is damaged here and it is unclear whether anything further was indeed present. All that can be said for certain is that the interior and exterior back page *does* contain material of this sort.

Overall, then, an excellent guidebook and one which represents a fairly important historical document for anyone interested in the growth and development of London Zoo in the early decades of the 20th century - and certainly one of the key items within my overall collection of zoo guidebooks, given the fact that (along with my collections of Tierpark Berlin, Zoo Berlin and Vogelpark Walsrode guidebooks) my various 20th century London Zoo guidebooks represent a significantly large fraction of the whole.

A whole house for civets <3 Though they've always been more common over in your lands!

Regarding the maps, did the zoo sell these guidebooks at shops outside the zoo? I can't imagine directions to the zoo would be very helpful if you were already there and purchasing it in whatever sort of gift shop they had back then.

The advertisements are really interesting, I'm glad you've been highlighting some of them. Typical late 1800s/early 1900s "medicine", a supposed cure for "blood poison" is made up of two poisons :)

From a general standpoint, do you think small carnivores were more popular then or now, both in europe and the USA?
 
Back
Top