Photographs from Whipsnade Zoo, taken circa August/September 1960

TeaLovingDave

Moderator
Staff member
15+ year member
Last weekend, when visiting Helly's parents, I spent a rather enjoyable day looking through a large box of photographs, cards, postcards and other documents which they had rediscovered in the attic - some dating back to the 19th century - and which had originally belonged to her grandmother Marjory before she passed away in 2010. As I have mentioned in the past, I have done quite a lot of research into Helly's family tree over the years, and as such these documents represent an important primary resource.

However, for the purposes of this forum one batch of photographs was of particular interest - although undated, they were accompanied by a handwritten note stating that they had been taken at Whipsnade Zoo. Along with various images of animals, this collection of photographs depicts Helly's father, aunt and their mother (Helly's grandmother), along with individuals I recognise to be her great-aunt Stella (the sister-in-law of Marjory) and her own family. Unfortunately, Helly's father wasn't sure when exactly the photographs were taken, as he used to visit his aunt Stella quite regularly as a child - however, there were two key pieces of evidence:

  • One of the photographs depicts an Indian Rhinoceros calf.
  • Helly's father looks about five or six in the photographs.

I knew that the first UK breeding of Indian Rhinoceros took place at Whipsnade in 1957, but as Helly's father was born in 1954 this seemed a little too early for the photographs to depict the calf in question. As such, I consulted @Tim May on the subject of whether or not the species was bred at Whipsnade in the years that followed - he was able to confirm that a second breeding took place at the collection in August 1960, which fits the apparent age of Helly's father much better.

Having asked (and received) permission to upload the photographs to Zoochat, I reproduce them below; I have uploaded the bulk to the Whipsnade Zoo section of the gallery, with some of the more "person-focused" ones merely attached to this thread.
 
Common Hippopotamus

full


California Sealion

full


Brown Bear

full


Indian Rhinoceros calf - born 18th August 1960

full


Indian Rhinoceros

full


Reticulated Giraffes

full


Asian Elephants

full


Mute Swans

full


Lion

full


Camel ride - with Helly's aunt and cousin-once-removed

full


Asian Elephant ride - with Helly's father, aunt, grandmother, great-aunt and cousins-once-removed

full


Pony ride - with Helly's father

IMG_20231019_0015.jpg

Pony ride - with Helly's cousin-once-removed and grandmother

IMG_20231019_0014.jpg

Donkey ride - with Helly's aunt

IMG_20231019_0009.jpg

Helly's father, aunt and grandmother having a picnic with extended family (great-aunt, great-uncle and cousins-once-removed)

IMG_20231019_0010.jpg
 

Attachments

  • IMG_20231019_0015.jpg
    IMG_20231019_0015.jpg
    118.7 KB · Views: 28
  • IMG_20231019_0014.jpg
    IMG_20231019_0014.jpg
    111.7 KB · Views: 27
  • IMG_20231019_0010.jpg
    IMG_20231019_0010.jpg
    139 KB · Views: 27
  • IMG_20231019_0009.jpg
    IMG_20231019_0009.jpg
    121 KB · Views: 27
Some interesting old Whipsnade photos; thanks for posting. That reminds me of another thread about ten years ago:-
London Zoo’s twentieth thylacine (and the last outside Australia) died in the North Mammal House on 9th August 1931
My girlfriend's grandmother got a photo of this animal, as I learnt when going through her old papers and documents when she died - I really have to root it out again and put it on here!
Any chance you'll be able to load the thylacine photo too?
 
Any chance you'll be able to load the thylacine photo too?

Once I find it again, I'll be scanning it so fast the machine might burst into flames! The family moved from Hexham to an old bastle-house in the depths of the Northumberland countryside around the time I originally mentioned it, and it's taken this long to relocate the documents I was sorting through last weekend :p there's a fair few photographs and documents I very much want to track down again, including the photographs which her grandmother took when visiting Berlin around Easter 1939 (I have relocated photographs from the Paris stretch of the trip, and some scattered shots from other areas of Germany) and the single surviving photograph of a great-aunt who died of tuberculosis in 1925, so I'm hoping it doesn't take another decade to find where the other boxes and folders ended up.

As it happens, I actually think the scrapbook where I found these Whipsnade photographs is one I hadn't come across before, as I have no memory of having seen them until now.... so I may well be pleasantly surprised again!
 
Interesting old photos. As Tim May confirmed the Indian rhino calf would have been the second one born there, the male 'Manik'. He lived on at Whipsnade with his mother 'Mohini' after the bull (his father) 'Mohan' had died, until his death as an adult(I don't remember the year) . The 1957 first birth was a female 'Mohiniji/a' who was sent together with Basel's first calf, male 'Rudra' to Milwaukee USA but they never bred. The photo of a rhino lying in the paddock would be the father 'Mohan' presumably. I remember the Carnivore pits as featured here too. The large riding elephant was probably 'Mangel Peary'. I can remember the johdpurs the Children's Zoo girl keepers wore at both ZSL sites. Happy days...
 
....the Indian rhino calf would have been the second one born there, the male 'Manik'. He lived on at Whipsnade with his mother 'Mohini' after the bull (his father) 'Mohan' had died, until his death as an adult(I don't remember the year) ....
The Indian rhinoceros "Manik", the second one to be born at Whipsnade, died in 1975.
I remember the Carnivore pits as featured here too.
I remember the carnivore pits too. The concrete pit, that I knew when it housed Kodiak bears, was originally built for tigers ...Gerald Durrell refers to tigers being kept there in his book "Beasts in my Belfry"
 
The Indian rhinoceros "Manik", the second one to be born at Whipsnade, died in 1975.

I remember the carnivore pits too. The concrete pit, that I knew when it housed Kodiak bears, was originally built for tigers ...Gerald Durrell refers to tigers being kept there in his book "Beasts in my Belfry"

Yes, I've seen old ZSL b/w postcards that show tigers at Whipsnade on a concrete background which I presume is the old pit that later housed the Kodiak bears- which I too remember in there. One photo even shows a tigress with cubs.
 
The Indian rhinoceros "Manik", the second one to be born at Whipsnade, died in 1975.

I remember the carnivore pits too. The concrete pit, that I knew when it housed Kodiak bears, was originally built for tigers ...Gerald Durrell refers to tigers being kept there in his book "Beasts in my Belfry"
The lion / tiger pits were originally chalk pits before that
 
Thank you for sharing @TeaLovingDave and good luck in finding the Thylacine photo! Amazing just how much of Whipsnade is still recognisable in these images.
 
Common Hippopotamus

full


California Sealion

full


Brown Bear

full


Indian Rhinoceros calf - born 18th August 1960

full


Indian Rhinoceros

full


Reticulated Giraffes

full


Asian Elephants

full


Mute Swans

full


Lion

full


Camel ride - with Helly's aunt and cousin-once-removed

full


Asian Elephant ride - with Helly's father, aunt, grandmother, great-aunt and cousins-once-removed

full


Pony ride - with Helly's father

View attachment 663710

Pony ride - with Helly's cousin-once-removed and grandmother

View attachment 663711

Donkey ride - with Helly's aunt

View attachment 663713

Helly's father, aunt and grandmother having a picnic with extended family (great-aunt, great-uncle and cousins-once-removed)

View attachment 663712
Excellent photographs that evoke memories of my visit there in 1961; I have the guidebook of that year in which I have marked the route that the family had taken around the Zoo. The enclosure behind Helly's aunt on the donkey was the gibbon island while the enclosure to the right of that was the sealion pond. We were never fortunate enough to participate in the animal rides; I doubt now that I will ever achieve my childhood dream of riding an elephant!
 
Yes, I've seen old ZSL b/w postcards that show tigers at Whipsnade on a concrete background which I presume is the old pit that later housed the Kodiak bears- which I too remember in there. One photo even shows a tigress with cubs.
I also remember seeing Kodiak bears in there as a 7year old, my parents were very patient with me as ,apparently I played up when they wanted to move on and I didn't
 
Back
Top