ZSL London Zoo Recollections of the old London Zoo Monkeyhouse.

Pertinax

Well-Known Member
15+ year member
Mention of this in a gallery thread about London prompted me to add a few recollections of this most interesting house that predated the Sobell Pavilions for ZSL's larger primates.

I believe the House was built in 1925(?- correct me if I am wrong Tim)). It was a long low building just inside the main Zoo entrance, roughly where Gorilla Kingdom( and formerly the Sobell Pavilions) is now. The glass-paned entrance doors were roughly opposite the existing Reptile House entrance, so it was one of the first buildings most people visited on entering the Zoo.

The house itself consisted of two long rows of indoor cages all with connecting doors to outside ones. All were raised above ground level so the floors were mostly waist high or thereabouts. Inside the house the two rows of cages were divided by a public concourse and were roughly divided into four sections. Three sections(from the doors on entering, the whole of the left hand side, and the further right hand side) were for Monkeys and the fourth section,the right hand side nearest the entrance, consisted of larger cages for the Great Apes. Long gloomy service passageways ran along the length of the building behind and below the cages. The left hand row was divided by some steps leading down to the passage way and a quite spacious keeper's kitchen and food prep. area. Access to the righthand passage was also by steps roughly opposite by the Gorilla cage.

The Ape cages were screened by a glass barrier, with a passageway at the front between glass and cage fronts that was large enough for keepers to walk along. The rest of the Monkey cages just had a simple rail barrier seperating the animals from the public.

Most of the Monkeys could see their neighbours as the divisions between the cages were largely mesh. There was frequently a 'hub-bub' where all the monkeys in the house became excited and displayed around their cages, one cage after another along the length of the house would echo with calling and leaping and hitting doors etc.. Even any slight stimulus such as a strange sound, or a fight or mating in one cage, could set this chain reaction off. After it finished there would be a sudden silence before normal activity resumed. Another familiar sound in the House was that of the small metal trap doors connecting inside and outside cages,swinging as the monkeys came and went.

Keepers entered the cages to clean them through small metal sliding doors in the lower sections, which were accessed from the service passageways behind. Food preparation was interesting; it was done on a big scale by cutting up a large amount of fruit and vegetables and with Monkey chow added, which were all then thoroughly mixed into a 'salad' and all shovelled into a wheelbarrow. Two keepers would then wheel the cart along the passageway,stopping at each service door which was opened and the required amount of food quickly thrown in (I seem to remember the Monkeys weren't even shut outside during this procedure!). The Apes' food was similar, but their portions were measured into labelled buckets, not served en masse.

Species kept that I remember were Mandrill( single & pair, Drill(trio), Olive and Yellow Baboons, Gelada (pair) Assamese Macaque(pair), Pigtailed Macaque(group), Liontailed Macaque(single female) Owl faced Monkey(single male) Talapoins, Mona Monkey(albino) Sooty(?) Mangabey. I'm sure there were more.

The Ape cages numbered about six. In the late 1960's the Orangutans normally occupied the cages nearest the entrance doors, then further along the adult pair of chimpanzees, Dick & Abena. Guy the Gorilla's cage was bigger than the others and the indoor was tiled in green. It had an indoor and 'middle' section, plus the square outdoor barred cage. One of the adjacent outdoor cages was later altered and raised significantly in height for Orangutans. Straw was always used for the Apes' bedding up until this era, when it was replaced with woodwool.

There is a good aerial photo of this House in one of the International Zoo Yearbooks (sorry, don't know which). If anyone has any photos of this house they could add to the relevant Gallery, I'd be interested to see them.
 
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Thanks for the description Pertinax, although I definitely went in this building as very young child, I have no recollection of it. My earliest memories of London Zoo are of Chi Chi, probably in 1971, when I was 4, I think the monkey house was demolished by then.
I did see a few clips of the inside cages in ' The Zoo in Winter' programme filmed in the late 60s, which was repeated on BBC a few years ago. It reminded me a bit of what I can remember of Bristol's ape/monkey houses which I would have seen when I was around 6 or 7. Not great & very bare, but there is a major zoo in the UK which still has something similar nearly 50 years on!
 
Many thanks, “Pertinax”, for your very interesting reminiscences of the old Monkey House.

(A minor detail; this building replaced the earlier Monkey House of 1864 and was actually opened at the end of 1927.)

Perhaps not surprisingly, my main memory of this building is of the famous western lowland gorilla “Guy” although I can also remember seeing the young mountain gorilla “Reuben” there when I was a small child. I didn’t appreciate then just how rare “Reuben” was or realise that I’d never see another individual (unless that rather contentious specimen in Antwerp really is a genuine mountain gorilla and not an eastern lowland gorilla).

I especially remember the albino mona monkey too; sometimes it shared a cage with a red uakari.

Those photographs “Nanook” posted certainly brought back lots of memories.
 
although I can also remember seeing the young mountain gorilla “Reuben” there when I was a small child. I didn’t appreciate then just how rare “Reuben” was or realise that I’d never see another individual

You bested me there as I never saw him, at least that I remember anyway. I remember a visit once during the period when he would have been there but the house was closed- I think it was when one of the first Orangutans(Bulu or Dan) was born.

Thanks for correction on the date.

I believe the female Gorilla 'Amohoro' at Antwerp has been proven by DNA test to be an Eastern Lowland.
 
Not great & very bare,

I forgot to mention- the inside cages were on two levels with a higher platform at the back( this formed part of the 'ceiling' of the service passage beneath). From memory they were tiled in white. There was a single( or maybe two) wooden bar high up across the width of each cage and that was all the 'furniture' Typical of the period.:(

Bristol's old Monkey House was a very similar design and would have 'worked' the same way, though just the one row of cages.
 
I can only remember the Sobell to be honest and they did have a large group of pig tailed Macaques led by Porky - i always wondered what happened to them
 
Apologies to revive such an old thread, but I'm in the process of building the monkey house as part of my recreation of London Zoo (I'm updating to the 1930s), and it feels like you might be just the people to help me.

This thread has been incredibly useful in visualising the building alongside the pictures and videos I've been able to find elsewhere - the general layout of the service corridor running behind the cages and the roof of the corridor forming the raised shelf (where the hatch to the outside is placed) all makes absolute sense. However, it looks to me like the gorilla cage specifically may have worked differently and I wondered if anyone would be able to shed any light on that for me?

In the pictures I've been able to find (of Guy, naturally), it looks like rather than the gorilla coming and going through a raised hatch in line with the interior shelf as is the case with all the other cages, the door is at ground level, and there are several windows lining the back wall. I'm unable to make this work in my head - was the gorilla cage only serviced from the front (from between the glass screen and the front of the cage), was there some sort of tunnel or chute through the service corridor, or am I missing something? Were these Guy-specific modifications that would therefore not have been present in the 1930s?
Any help would be massively appreciated, thanks!
 
Apologies to revive such an old thread, but I'm in the process of building the monkey house as part of my recreation of London Zoo (I'm updating to the 1930s), and it feels like you might be just the people to help me.

This thread has been incredibly useful in visualising the building alongside the pictures and videos I've been able to find elsewhere - the general layout of the service corridor running behind the cages and the roof of the corridor forming the raised shelf (where the hatch to the outside is placed) all makes absolute sense. However, it looks to me like the gorilla cage specifically may have worked differently and I wondered if anyone would be able to shed any light on that for me?

In the pictures I've been able to find (of Guy, naturally), it looks like rather than the gorilla coming and going through a raised hatch in line with the interior shelf as is the case with all the other cages, the door is at ground level, and there are several windows lining the back wall. I'm unable to make this work in my head - was the gorilla cage only serviced from the front (from between the glass screen and the front of the cage), was there some sort of tunnel or chute through the service corridor, or am I missing something? Were these Guy-specific modifications that would therefore not have been present in the 1930s?
Any help would be massively appreciated, thanks!
I have just watched a short documentary called A day in the life of a Head keeper (Laurie Smith) of monkeys, London Zoo, made in 1954. One sequence shows Laurie entering Guy's indoor cage through a door, with a step up to it and behind him as he enters is a door with a window where the public can be seen watching him, (public viewing area ). Beside the door he entered through is a thick barred panel which food was passed through to Guy.I would say that there was no service corridor as such. However, it also shows Guy entering the indoor cage through a slide higher up. I hope that this is of use.
 
I've racked my brains to think of how it exactly was, but not much success really. There was a glass-screened service passage running along the front of the Ape cages(not any of the others though, they just had a public barrier), and as Strathmorezoo mentioned, was entered via a door by Guy's cage. As to the other layout, it was similar to all the others with the tunnel underneath and no, I don't remember a shute or anything to the outside. He came and went via a slide/trap door that led onto the high shelf, then he climbed down into the main area, the other Apes had similar on a smaller scale. It was actually three cages, indoor, middle(a sort of verandah) and outside. Sorry can't be more specific.
 
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Beside the door he entered through is a thick barred panel which food was passed through to Guy.I would say that there was no service corridor as such.

I suspect that is part of the front of the indoor cage which was barred its whole width. There was a narrow glass-fronted service corridor running along the front of (just) the run of Ape cages.
 
Interesting. Is that documentary available anywhere, @Strathmorezoo? Feels like it could be very handy…

I wonder if perhaps the windows simply look out from the service corridor in that case? Maybe knowing exactly where the gorilla was before shoving food blindly through a hatch was considered more important than for other primates…
 
Interesting. Is that documentary available anywhere, @Strathmorezoo? Feels like it could be very handy…

I wonder if perhaps the windows simply look out from the service corridor in that case? Maybe knowing exactly where the gorilla was before shoving food blindly through a hatch was considered more important than for other primates…
I found the 15 minutes documentary on Talking Pictures tv a free view channel about 6 months ago and recorded it. It might be worth checking utube for it.
 
Maybe knowing exactly where the gorilla was before shoving food blindly through a hatch was considered more important than for other primates…

From memory their food was placed in piles or scattered on the floor of the indoor cages while the Apes and Monkeys were shut outside and then let in again for feeding later on. 'Guy' could also be fed things directly through the bars fronting his cage but that was more treats and individual items.
 
From memory their food was placed in piles or scattered on the floor of the indoor cages while the Apes and Monkeys were shut outside and then let in again for feeding later on. 'Guy' could also be fed things directly through the bars fronting his cage but that was more treats and individual items.
You are quite right, in the documentary after the indoor cages had been cleaned, food was provided and then the animals were allowed back in.
 
You are quite right, in the documentary after the indoor cages had been cleaned, food was provided and then the animals were allowed back in.

Food was on a mass production system, all chopped up together, mixed and then put into a wheelbarrow which was trundled along the passageway and the relevant amount for each cage chucked in through the open doors(animals shut outside then) using a shovel or scoop. It was mainly just scattered on the floor as a result. Not sure if Guy or the other Apes got any special attention in that respect though they may have got their own delivery bins I think. I remember Laurie 'Smudger' Smith and knew him quite well. By then he was the head keeper nearing retirement and didn't do any of the mucky or routine work like cage cleaning or food prep any more, the other less senior keepers (five in total in that house + Smudger) did all that! We went to his house a couple of times to see all his photos etc. Nice guy.
 
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