William Henry Flower

Sir William Henry Flower (November 30, 1831 - July 1, 1899) was an English zoologist. Flower was born at Stratford-on-Avon. Choosing medicine as his profession, he began his studies at University College, London, where he showed special aptitude for physiology and comparative anatomy and took his MB. degree in 1851. He then joined the Army Medical Service, and went out to the Crimea as assistant-surgeon, receiving the medal with four clasps. On his return to England he became a member of the surgical staff of the Middlesex hospital, London, and in 1861 succeeded John Thomas Quekett as curator of the Hunterian Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons of England. In 1870 he also became Hunterian professor, and in 1884, on the death of Sir Richard Owen, was appointed to the directorship of the Natural History Museum at South Kensington. He took over from Albert C. L. G. Gnther as Keeper of Zoology in 1895, remaining so until 1898. He died in London. Flower made valuable contributions to structural anthropology, publishing, for example, complete and accurate measurements of no less than 1,300 human skulls, and as a comparative anatomist he ranked high, devoting himself especially to the study of the mammalia. His foremost studies were on marsupials, whales and primates, and he was the first person to show that lemurs are primates. Flower was also a leading authority on the arrangement of museums. He insisted on the importance of distinguishing between collections intended for the use of specialists and those designed for the instruction of the general public, pointing out that it was as futile to present to the former a number of merely typical forms as to provide the latter with a long series of specimens differing only in the most minute details. His ideas, which were largely and successfully applied to the museums of which he had charge, gained wide approval, and their influence entitles him to be looked upon as a reformer who did much to improve the methods of museum arrangement and management.

Works

  • An Introduction to the Osteology of the Mammalia (1870)
  • Fashion in Deformity (1885)
  • The Horse: a Study in Natural History (1890)
  • Introduction to the Study of Mammals, Living and Extinct (1891)
  • Essays on Museums and other Subjects (1898).
Flower, William Henry Flower, William Henry Flower, William Henry

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
sonny stitt
bloody stupid johnson
obscurantism
trench gashes
list of minnesota lakes
giants of jazz
bootheel
genus (music)
independence class aircraft carrier
garrett systems
list of rulers of tahiti
al mckibbon
dodge omni
te ha'apapa iii
pumping station
carlos paredes
yes, america can!
adirs
lublin truck
mark knight
warren ellis (musician)
hans much
karl muck
lambuth university
atheist left
halo: the fall of reach
halo: the flood
inventor's notebook
frederick henry mueller
halo: first strike
aloisius joseph muench
ua (singer)
soft sign
martin attlee, 2nd earl attlee
flaming gorge reservoir
sa`id al mufti pasha
minie ball
metropolitan copenhagen
campanulaceae
psychology of learning
house of kawananakoa
russell means
smi
mohamed al kahtani