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| Reg Lanworn |
By contrast with Lord Moyne’s expedition cruise of 1934-35 on board his large motor vessel, Rosaura, in which live Tuataras from New Zealand, Komodo Dragons from what was then the Dutch East Indies and Kagus from New Caledonia were brought back to London Zoo, I know who looked after the animals on board during his next expedition in 1935-36. And what’s more as a 16-year old reptile (and amphibian)-mad schoolboy I spoke at length to the man himself.
The trip in 1935/6 was more ambitious in scope, with zoological exploration as a further objective, for which amateur zoologists Anthony and Alvi[l]da Chaplin were responsible, assisted by Keeper Reg Lanworn of the reptile house at London Zoo who took Komodo dragons back to London with him.
However, here I think he is mistaken. The Komodo Dragons were collected on the 1934-35 trip, not the 1935-36 one.
This cutting on Keeper Lanworn’s exploits is from Reynolds News, a now defunct Sunday newspaper owned by the Co-operative Party, of 26 April 1936:
The list of animals received at the Zoo, the gift of course of Lord Moyne, is shown in the Annual Report for 1936: 1 Matschie's Tree Kangaroo, 1 Australian Crane, 7 Keeled Papuan Boas, 7 Fierce Papuan Boas, 5 Common Asiatic Toads, 1 Indian Bull Frog, 3 Greater Indian Rat Snakes, 3 Death Adders, 1 Nicobar Pit Viper, 2 Brown-spottedPit Vipers, 6 Amethystine Pythons, 6 Papuan Cat Snakes, 2 Bocourt's Water Snakes, 2 Broad-headed Water Snakes, 2 Indian Cobras, 1 Indian Python, 1 Moon Snake, 1 Estuarine Crocodile, 1 Parachute Gecko, 1 Peron's House Gecko, 1 Lace Monitor, 4 Helmed Lizards, 4 Fin-tailed Lizards, 8 Indian Monitors, 2 Two-banded Monitors, 5 Great House Geckos, 1 Banded Soft-shelled Terrapin, 4 Ceylon Terrapins, 5 Amboina Box Tortoises, 2 Phayre's Tortoises, 4 Siamese Terrapins, 1 Starred Tortoise, 5 White's Tree Frogs.
The 1935-36 trip was not the first time Reg Lanworn had been sent abroad by the Zoo. On 29 March 1930 he sailed from Liverpool on board the Blue Funnel Line’s passenger/cargo ship Teiresias bound for Singapore. He was aged 22 and travelling first class.
The China Express and Telegraph of 3 July 1930 reported why had been to Singapore:
ARRIVALS AT THE ZOO
GIFTS FROM SINGAPORE
Keeper Lanworn has returned to London from Singapore in charge of a large collection of mammals, birds and reptiles for the Zoo. Through Messrs. Alfred Holt and Co., the consignment, which included 99 crates and cages, was conveyed freight-free. The collection is due to Mr. A. St. Alban Smith, managing director of the Seletar Plantations, who persuaded friends to make gifts, superintended the purchases from dealers, and himself obtained and presented most of the reptiles.
The largest animals are a pair of tigers and a bear, the former presented by Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Glenister and the latter by Mrs. Glenister and Mrs, E. L. D. Evans, of Ipoh, Perak. Two young orang-utans, four tree-kangaroos, four crowned pigeons, and two young cassowaries are additions which were very much wished for. The assortment of reptiles is a very fine one.
The list of animals in this shipment donated by Alfred St. Alban Smith (1880-1940) takes more than a whole page in the Annual Report for 1930. The reptile collection was indeed a fine one and Smith, a rubber planter in Johore who also sent collections of reptiles to zoos in the USA, was awarded the Society’s silver medal in 1931.
Reg Lanworn, in charge of the 99 crates, had shown that he could be ‘let out’.
Arthur Reginald Lanworn† was born in Kentish Town on 13 March 1908. I do not know when he became a keeper at the Zoo but most likely on or shortly after his leaving school in 1922 (the school-leaving age was 14). Several tragedies can be found in the records of Lanworn’s life. In 1939 his sister and her boyfriend were found dead in a gas-filled room. Her parents had refused consent to their marriage. Sir Bernard Spilsbury, the famous forensic pathologist reported to the also famous coroner, Bentley Purchase, most recently seen portrayed in the film Operation Mincemeat, who recorded a verdict of suicide while of unsound mind. Reg Lanworn appeared as a witness at the inquest and stated ‘it would have been satisfactory to both parties if they had got married. They were very fond of each other’.
Personal tragedy again struck in 1942. Having married in 1933 and with a daughter, his new-born son and his wife died. He married again in 1948. Then, in 1960, tragedy struck the Reptile House. Workmen returned to the Reptile House after Christmas to continue servicing the artesian well which supplied both the Reptile House and the Aquarium via a pit in the floor. On removing the cover a natural accumulation of carbon dioxide gushed forth. The workmen employed by an outside contractor were immediately overcome and fell into the narrow pit. Two keepers trying to rescue the men were also rendered unconscious; one died immediately, the other eleven months later. The first was Lanworn’s Head Keeper, Frederick Dexter, aged 46, who had worked at the Zoo for 32 years. The other was Anthony Hodgson, 22, only recently returned from National Service. Keepers made heroic efforts to save the men earning commendations from the coroner. Ten employees of the Zoo were recognised by the Royal Humane Society for their prompt and gallant efforts in both the rescue and the attempts at resuscitation.
As he rose through the ranks in the Reptile House, Reg Lanworn often found himself in newspaper reports and on the cinema newsreels. Anything to do with snakes or crocodiles is always good for column inches and Keeper Lanworn being bitten by a newly-hatched python was good a story in the Daily Express as was the Common Boa arriving in cargo as a stowaway at London docks not turning out to be the as reported to the Zoo a feared Fer-de-Lance. Two ’22 ft’ pythons made the newspapers in 1949 when they both grabbed a chicken at feeding time and fought tenaciously. Lanworn, then Head Keeper, and Jack Lester, Curator of Reptiles, pulled at either end of the tangle.
A newspaper report quoted in an article by Nick Thompson suggests Reg Lanworn was called up to serve in the forces during the Second World War.
London Zoo like most institutions had a strict hierarchy. Keepers were one class and curators and above were the other. In military terms, keepers were private soldiers and non-commissioned officers; curators were the officers. Keepers could make it up the promotion ladder to reach the pinnacle of Overseer, of which London Zoo had around five. They were the sergeant-majors—and they had a uniform to match their status. Keepers had short jackets but overseers had long coats similar to those worn by the guards regiments in winter. When on public duty, keepers wore their uniforms including summer when they must have broiled. I had a long talk one summer with Reg Lanworn who was keen to move out of the Reptile House to stand by the old reptiliary. His uniform in the heat of the Reptile House in summer must have been rather uncomfortable.
I do not know when he was promoted to Overseer of Reptiles but I have found a record showing him in that grade by 1955.
In the late 1940s and early 1950s the Reptile House had the reputation of being a place friendly to amateur herpetologists as I reported HERE. At that time Jack Lester was curator and Margaret Southwick was also on the staff. Margaret married Reg Bloom, then also employed at Regents Park having been an animal collector withJohn Seago in East Africa, in 1953. The newly married Blooms then left for East Africa before returning to UK where he was involved in starting and/or running a number of zoos. Lester, Lanworn and Southwick were founder or early members of the British Herpetological Society after it was formed in 1947.
Reg Lanworn retired after more than 40 years at the Zoo in 1968, aged 60. By then he was listed as ‘Herpetologist’. I seem to recall he was given that title in recognition of his work and the simple fact that at the time he was the only member of the Zoo staff, apart from his own juniors, who knew anything about reptiles after the death of Jack Lester in 1956. In his new role he must have been sitting on that cusp between ‘keeper’ and ‘curator’. A year earlier he was awarded the Society’s Bronze Medal ‘for outstanding service in the Reptile House’.
On occasion I have come across articles written by Reg Lanworn but did not make a note of them. One turned up recently on eBay. It was on the care of terrapins and seems to have been cut from a Zoo publication, possibly the magazine of the XYZ Club. He was described as the Zoo’s herpetologist so must date from the mid-1960s.
After retirement he wrote a popular book on reptiles and was co-author of a series on animal life in different parts of the world.
In retirement Reg and his wife moved out of London, to the village of Barton Mills near Mildenhall in Suffolk, and later into Mildenhall. He died on 29 January 2005, aged 96.
Reg Lanworn served in the Reptile House from the regime of Joan Proctor as Curator of Reptiles, through the periods when Burgess Barnett and Jack Lester were in charge to a time in the 1950s and 60s when he effectively ran the whole show. He also witnessed the periodic upheavals that the Zoological Society still brings upon itself, including the unfortunate removal of Burgess Barnett, the Cansdale affair plus of course the untimely death of Jack Lester. He operated during the period when the London Zoo’s Reptile House, despite its many problems that became more apparent over the years, and the reptile collection was in its heyday. I am pleased to have met him and to recognise the success the Zoo had in taking boys from north London and producing the devoted, highly capable and knowledgable members of staff who stayed at Regents Park until they retired.
BRITISH PATHÉ NEWSREEL FILMS
Baby Alligators 1949
Snakes 1950
Mrs Olive Parton Dutta (1915-1994) was the wife of Reginald Sirdar Mohammed Dutta (1914-1989), a well-known owner of an aquarium shop on Blandford Street, Marylebone. He wrote a number of books on aquaria and fish keeping.
Cobras 1953
Alligator Scrubbing 1953
*Anthony Freskyn Charles Hamby Chaplin, 3rd Viscount Chaplin (1906-1981) was Secretary of the Zoological Society of London from 1952 to 1955. He was married to Alvilde Bridges (1909–1994) from 1933 until divorce in 1950.
†At birth he was registered as Arthur Reginald but in other official records he is Reginald Arthur.
Cooper A, Ellis M, Guggisberg CAW, Lanworn R. 1968. Animals of the World. Europe. London: Hamlyn.
Stanley N. 2016. 'Some Friends Came to See Us’: Lord Moyne's 1936 Expedition to the Asmat. London: British Museum ISBN 978 086159 206 7 ISSN 1747 3640.
Wheeler A, Christie D, Cohen E, Jarman C, Lanworn R. 1970. Animals of the World. Europe. London: Hamlyn.
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| Daily Mirror 4 May 1948 |
















