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Sub-fonds

Records of the Department of Entomology

Catalogue reference: Division within DF

What’s it about?

This record is about the Records of the Department of Entomology dating from 1866-1999.

Is it available online?

Maybe, but not on The National Archives website. This record is held at The Natural History Museum Archives, London. How to view it.

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Full description and record details

Reference
Division within DF
Title
Records of the Department of Entomology
Date
1866-1999
Description

Records of the Department of Entomology comprising:

  • DF 300, Department of Entomology: Keeper's Correspondence
  • DF 301, Department of Entomology: Registers of Departmental Correspondence
  • DF 302, Department of Entomology: Keeper's Out-Letters
  • DF 303, Department of Entomology: Reports to Trustees
  • DF 304, Department of Entomology: Sectional Correspondence
  • DF 305, Department of Entomology: Keeper's Expedition Files
  • DF 306, Department of Entomology: Keeper's Subject Files
  • DF 307, Department of Entomology: Keeper's Staff Files
  • DF 308, Department of Entomology: Donation Records
  • DF 309, Department of Entomology: Departmental and Sectional Visitors Books
  • DF 310, Department of Entomology: Departmental Finance and Accounts
  • DF 311, Department of Entomology: Artwork for Publication
  • DF 312, Department of Entomology: Librarian's Correspondence
  • DF 313, Department of Entomology: Specimen Loan Books
  • DF 330, Department of Entomology: Economic Section: Correspondence and Papers
  • DF 331, Department of Entomology: Diptera Section: Correspondence and Papers
  • DF 332, Department of Entomology: Lepidoptera Section: Correspondence and Papers
  • DF 333, Department of Entomology: Coleoptera Section: Correspondence and Papers
  • DF 334, Department of Entomology: Hemiptera Section: Correspondence And Papers
  • DF 335, Department of Entomology:"Neuropteroid" Orders Section: Correspondence and Papers
Separated material

Letters and memoranda relating to the insect collections before the formation of the Department are in two volumes of Entomological Memoranda, 1821-1840, held in the Entomology Library and in:

DF 200

DF 205

Held by
The Natural History Museum Archives, London
Legal status
Public Record(s)
Language
English
Physical description
20 series
Subjects
Topics
Art, architecture and design
Food and drink
Administrative / biographical background

The Department of Entomology was set up on 1st April 1913. Before that date insects had been studied alongside the other arthropods within the Zoology Department. In 1895 Zoology was divided into three sections, with Arthur Gardiner Butler (1844-1925) becoming Assistant Keeper responsible for the insects. Formation of a separate department of entomology was recommended in 1906, but not implemented for seven years. In 1913 the staff consisted of the Keeper, Charles Joseph Gahan (1862-1939), nine Assistants, and ten Attendants. Most of the work of the Department was in classical taxonomy and curation, although some research on tropical diseases and other economic and applied topics was initiated. Staff numbers were increased in 1930 only to be cut back during the economic crisis of 1931. However, by 1937 there were 17 scientists distributed among seven sections, backed up by 20 technical staff and 22 specialists, who regularly worked in the Department as unofficial researchers. Economic research was restricted to 'domestic' areas during the 1930s, to avoid overlapping with other research institutes, and the economic collection was disbanded in 1933. By 1965 staff numbered 68, who between them were responsible for a collection of more than 15 million specimens, a fine library, a large exhibition gallery, an extensive taxonomic research programme and an information service.

Since 1909 the Department has worked closely with the Bureau of Entomological Research (later the Imperial, and finally the Commonwealth Institute of Entomology), which was set up by the Colonial Office under Sir Guy Marshall, and housed in the Museum. In 1953 the Colonial Office set up The Termite Research Unit under W V Harris, which is housed in the Museum under a similar arrangement.

From 1882 the insect collections were housed in four, and later ten, rooms in the southwest basement of the Museum. The Department moved into an extension of the New Spirit Building in 1930, pending construction of a new Entomology Block. This building, which was under construction from 1934 to 1952, was shared with the Bird Section of Zoology Department until 1972. There was an outpost of the Department at Tring from 1937, when Lord Rothschild bequeathed his huge insect collection to the Museum, until 1972, when the transfer of the Bird Section finally made space for it to move to London.

Assistant Keepers in Charge of Insects:

Arthur Gardiner Butler 1895-1901 George Francis Hampson (acting) 1901-1905 Charles Owen Waterhouse 1905-1910 Charles Joseph Gahan 1910-1913

Keepers of Entomology:

Charles Joseph Gahan 1913-1927Ernest Edward Austen 1927-1932Norman Denbigh Riley 1932-1955William Edward China 1955-1960John Priestman Doncaster 1960-1968Paul Freeman 1968-1981
Publication note(s)
'The Department of Entomology of the British Museum (Natural History), 1904-1964, a brief historical sketch', N D Riley (The XIIth International Congress of Entomology, London, 1964). 'The Natural History Museum at South Kensington', W T Stearn (Heinemann, 1981) Chapter 13.
Record URL
https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/C1324/

Catalogue hierarchy

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Within the fonds: DF

Records created and acquired by the Natural History Museum, London

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Records of the Department of Entomology

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