Biographical dictionary

The Biographical Dictionary of British Coleopterists is compiled and maintained by Michael Darby. The Dictionary can be accessed below, and see also the additional information provide by Michael:

Michael would be pleased to hear from anyone wishing to make corrections or alterations to the Dictionary, which will be fully acknowledged. Email Michael Darby or write to Michael at 33 Bedwin Street, SALISBURY, Wiltshire, SP1 3UT.

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Namesort ascending Dates Biography
CANN, F.R.

Published notes on Xylobiops basilaris and Eburia quadrigeminata in EMM, 65, 1929,16-17, and 73, 1937, 55-6 respectively. He worked at the Forestry Products Research Laboratory at Princes Risborough, Buckinghamshire. (MD 1/O2)

CAMPBELL-TAYLOR, James Edward 8 June 1873 – 23 December 1950 A Bank Manager who collected Lepidoptera and Coleoptera. At the time of his death his wife said that part of his collections had been sold and that she retained the remaining part, which, together with his diaries and papers, had been in store since the end of the War. (MD3/03)
CAMPBELL, T.V.

Mentioned by G.J. Arrow, Lamellicornia: Rutelinae, Desmonycinae and Euchirinae, 1917, in the FBI series, as a collector of Rutelinae at Kodaikanal (95) and Madras (221). There are some specimens bearing this name in the general collection of Coleoptera in the RSM. Tony Irwin informs me that there are a number of Campbell’s insects in E.A. Butler’s foreign collection of Coleoptera and Hemiptera at Norwich Museum. (MD 1/O2, 10/03)

CAMPBELL, R.J.

Listed as a subscriber to Denny (1825). His address is given as Bethel Street, Norwich. (MD 1/O2)

CAMPBELL, D.C.

Listed by Johnson & Halbert (1902), 542, as one of the 'many collectors of Irish Coleoptera' who helped them in compiling their work. 'Some beetles' collected by Campbell on the shores of Lough Swilly which he sent to Johnson and Halbert are mentioned specifically in the text (591). (MD 1/O2)

CAMPBELL, Angus Listed in Ent.Ann., 1857, as interested in British Lepidoptera and Coleoptera. His address is given as 6 Cave Terrace, Crescent Road, Plumstead, Kent. (MD 1/O2)
CAMERON, Malcolm 1873 - 31 October 1954

Qualified in medicine at the London Hospital and became a naval surgeon. He saw active service in the Boer War and in the 1914-18 War, taking part in the Battle of the Falkland Islands in H.M.S. Cornwall, and in the East African campaign. At the end of the War he was posted to the Admiralty, but not being particularly interested in administration he retired about 1920, with the rank of Surgeon Commander, to devote his life to entomology. He went to the Indian Forestry Research Institute at Dehra Dun, but after two years he was invalided to Switzerland with a suspected lung infection. After his health was restored he came back to London in 1925.

Cameron's interest in entomology appears to have started with Lepidoptera and his first  recorded publication was on Lycaena icarus in Ent, 20, 1887, 40. By 1900, when he published on the 'Reoccurence of Actocharis readingi Sharp at Plymouth' in EMM, 36, 1910, 261, he had not only taken up the Coleoptera, but in particular the Staphylinidae, the family with which his name is most closely associated.

Camerons' travels afforded him considerable opportunities for collecting all over the world, and, as many of his more than 150 papers testify, he seized these chances with alacrity. The Staphylinidae of Java, Borneo, China, Japan, Turkey, New Zealand, Africa, Haiti, Mauritius and many other countries were all studied by him. His most important publication however, and undoubtedly the one for which he is best known, is the four volumes (in five) on Staphylinidae for the FBI series from 1930 to 1939, which amount to some 1,862 pages.

It is perhaps hardly surprising that many of Cameron's papers on the British fauna relate to specimens taken in close proximity to the ports of Devonport and Plymouth. It was at the former in 1898 that he first met J.H. Keys with whom he was to become friendly. He recorded in the obituary of Keys which he wrote in the EMM, 77, 1941, 60-61, that he looked back with great pleasure on the many excursions which they had made together over Dartmoor.

Cameron gave a collection of 12,000 beetles to the NHM in 1936 (1936-555) and bequeathed his collection of Staphylinidae, amounting to some 55,000 specimens, including 2,230 holotypes and 1,064 paratypes, as well as much unidentified material, to the NHM too. According to a ms notebook of Sir T. Hudson Beare in the RSM, Cameron gave other specimens to him. The following MS material in the NHM: Typescript List of Coleoptera observed in the Maltese Islands by Cameron and A.Caruana Gatte, 1907; five MS notebooks titled Cameron European Coleoptera, 1898-1907; one MS notebook titled Catalogue of Mr M. Cameron’s collection from the West Indies, 1908 (taken during his cruise in the Indefatigable); miscellaneous notes; and correspondence with 30 British and foreign entomologists. (Harvey et al. (1996), 38-39).

There are obituaries in EMM, 90, 1954, 290 (by E.B. Britton); ProcRESL., (C), 19, 1955, 68 (by P.A.Buxton); and in Publicacoes Culturais de Companhia de Diamantes de Angola, 48, 1959, 111-112. (MD 1/O2, 10/03, 1/22)

CAMERON, M.
CAMERON, Cedric W.

Published 'Elater sanguinolentus Schr. var paleatus Cand. at Wimbledon' in EMM., 54, 1918, 183. He lived at 'St Oswalds', Claughton, Birkenhead. (MD 1/O2)

CAIGER, Hugh 1895 - 1970.

A clergyman who lived at Birling Vicarage, near Maidstone until 1 November 1960 when he moved to 2(3?)54 Chester Road, Woodford, Stockport, Cheshire. Listed as a member of the Amateur Entomologists Society in 1962 with a general interest in 'entomology' but he specialised in aquatic groups in particular. His publications included 'Aquatic Coleoptera in Cheshire' in EMM, 104, 1968, 232 (records captures from 1961 –1968) and 'Gyrinus bicolor and G. colymbus in Cheshire', ibid, 105, 1969, 268.

There are four boxes of aquatic Coleoptera (and one of Hemiptera) amounting to about 1000 specimens collected by him in c.1960, and some related mss, including six diaries (starting 14 April 1959 and ending in 1969), and a notebook describing and mapping many of his collecting sites, in the Manchester Museum. The diaries were borrowed by Garth Foster, who wrote in Latissimus, 21 September 2006, 43-44,that they ‘provide a charming insight into the care with which this vicar, far from retired, in the sense that he often took church services for others until soon before he died ... went about ‘fisging’ for beetles. He was always anxious to prospect a site andn to gain permission, often generating many a pleasant conversation in the process. He was also very keen on Eccles and Chorley cakes, and local tea-rooms, and his accounts include significant commentaries on the weather... I have extracted 1,034 records by him for Cheshire, Staffordshire and Derbyshire, but I have drawn a veil over his first efforts in the West Malling area... He was clearly troubled by the Hydroporus palustris complex... Jack Balfour-Browne amongst others, helped with identifications, and it was Jack who obliged him to publish his more interesting finds...’ (MD 1/O2, 11/09)

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