Percy Lowe
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Percy Roycroft Lowe (January 2, 1870–August 18, 1948) was an English surgeon and ornithologist.
Lowe was born at Stamford, Lincolnshire and studied medicine at Jesus College, Cambridge. He served as a civil surgeon in the Second Boer War, and it was whilst in South Africa that he became interested in ornithology. On his return he became private physician to Sir Frederic Johnstone, and during World War One was medical officer on an ambulance ship in the Mediterranean.
Lowe worked with Dorothea Bate on fossil ostriches in China.[1]
In November 1919 he succeeded William Robert Ogilvie-Grant as Curator of Birds at the Natural History Museum, retiring on his sixty-fifth birthday in 1935. He was succeeded by Norman Boyd Kinnear.
He was editor of the Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club from 1920 to 1925 and president of the British Ornithologists' Union from 1938 to 1943. In 1939 he was elected a Corresponding Member of the Royal Australasian Ornithologists Union
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Bate, Dorothea Minola Alice (1878-1951), palaeontologist by Karolyn Shindler in Dictionary of National Biography online (accessed 23 November 2007)