{"title":"Hilery Desmond Jackson:鸟类学家和博物馆学家","authors":"R. Mark Brigham, Peter Locke","doi":"10.2989/00306525.2022.2128559","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Ostrich is co-published by NISC (Pty) Ltd and Informa UK Limited (trading as Taylor & Francis Group) Hilery Desmond Jackson, called Desmond and known as Des, was the only son of Clifford and Pat Jackson. He was born on 9 March 1935, in Balfour, Transvaal South Africa. He matriculated in 1951 with a distinction in mathematics. His early working career featured stints at the Department of Justice in Pretoria, then Coronation Collieries in Witbank where he was a Learner Official, doing mainly surveying. He spent 1954 doing the first year of a BSc (Mining Engineering) before returning to Coronation Collieries in 1955. He worked for the City of Johannesburg in 1956 as Technical Assistant doing surveying and drafting, mainly on road layouts, sewerage and water reticulations. He spent two years in Witbank in the same capacity. In 1959, Des joined the Grain Marketing Board of Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) in Salisbury (now Harare) as a planning officer, and remained there until 1969. As a young man, Des spent much time flying for recreation and bird watching. The latter eventually became his primary pursuit and led to his career in ornithology. He was hired by the National Museums of Rhodesia as Keeper of Zoology in Umtali in 1970 and, when the long serving Curator of Umtali Museum (Donald Broadley) opted to relinquish his administrative role and revert to Keeper of Herpetology in 1973, the reins were handed over to Des who remained in that post until 1978. (Keepers of a department and Curators of museums were subsequently re-designated as Curators and Directors respectively.) He spent until 1974 collecting, processing and doing research on zoological specimens and undertaking an avifaunal survey of the Umtali Municipal Area, in particular the nightjars. Field expeditions took him all over Rhodesia and Malawi, and to parts of Zambia, Mozambique and Kenya. Detailed fieldwork on nightjars was carried out 50 km south of Umtali for several months each year from 1972 to 1975. After 1974, he focussed on Museum administration and development. As was his approach to all tasks, Des accepted the challenge with relish and introduced many new concepts and ideas into the running of the museum and, especially, the manner in which it interacted with the local community. This was a novel idea and Des was ahead of his time in this respect. He maintained that he wanted to dispel the stereotypical image of a Museum Curator as a bespectacled man in a white dust coat with a yellow duster in hand! Des correctly understood that for a museum to be successful in a small community, the local population needed to share and participate in its activities. To this end he created the Umtali Museum Scientific and Cultural Association (UMSCA), which all the small and fragmented clubs and societies in the city were invited to join. Under UMSCA’s ‘umbrella’, the clubs that were not viable on their own, joined forces, had a permanent meeting place, and contributed to a monthly magazine produced and distributed by the museum. Clubs were encouraged to hold exhibitions at the museum, in particular the Manicaland Artists Society, and an annual event was held at which all members put on a display for the public. This concept gave the community a strong sense of ‘belonging’ to the museum and dispelled the myth of it being seen as an ivory tower institution. Des also recognised that to overcome the perception that the museum’s exhibits were static and unchanging thereby making repeated visits unnecessary, a programme of temporary exhibitions would provide regular stimulus to visit. This idea developed into a lasting relationship with the National Gallery in Harare whereby all their travelling art exhibitions visited Mutare (Umtali was renamed Mutare after independence in 1980), effectively turning Mutare Museum into an outreach arm of the Gallery. While Des was primarily a scientific researcher at heart, his administrative skills were recognised when the incumbent Executive Director of National Museums and Monuments (NMMZ) resigned in 1978 and Des was appointed to the post. This meant relocating from Mutare to Harare, which was a considerable sacrifice as Des and his wife Joy (née Stopforth) had made Mutare their home. However, Des embraced the new position with vigour. In 1978 he was also accepted by the University of Natal (Pietermaritzburg, South Africa) for a special MSc (Zoology) degree on the basis of his record of research and publication. He was awarded the degree in 1984. One of his first accomplishments as Executive Director was to negotiate the return of the soapstone Zimbabwe bird housed in the South African Museum in Cape Town to its rightful home in Zimbabwe. This was achieved by offering in exchange a collection of Hymenoptera type specimens from the Entomological Collection at the National Museum in Bulawayo. While this was principally a politically expedient Obituary","PeriodicalId":1,"journal":{"name":"Accounts of Chemical Research","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":16.4000,"publicationDate":"2022-10-13","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Hilery Desmond Jackson: ornithologist and museologist\",\"authors\":\"R. Mark Brigham, Peter Locke\",\"doi\":\"10.2989/00306525.2022.2128559\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Ostrich is co-published by NISC (Pty) Ltd and Informa UK Limited (trading as Taylor & Francis Group) Hilery Desmond Jackson, called Desmond and known as Des, was the only son of Clifford and Pat Jackson. He was born on 9 March 1935, in Balfour, Transvaal South Africa. He matriculated in 1951 with a distinction in mathematics. His early working career featured stints at the Department of Justice in Pretoria, then Coronation Collieries in Witbank where he was a Learner Official, doing mainly surveying. He spent 1954 doing the first year of a BSc (Mining Engineering) before returning to Coronation Collieries in 1955. He worked for the City of Johannesburg in 1956 as Technical Assistant doing surveying and drafting, mainly on road layouts, sewerage and water reticulations. He spent two years in Witbank in the same capacity. In 1959, Des joined the Grain Marketing Board of Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) in Salisbury (now Harare) as a planning officer, and remained there until 1969. As a young man, Des spent much time flying for recreation and bird watching. The latter eventually became his primary pursuit and led to his career in ornithology. He was hired by the National Museums of Rhodesia as Keeper of Zoology in Umtali in 1970 and, when the long serving Curator of Umtali Museum (Donald Broadley) opted to relinquish his administrative role and revert to Keeper of Herpetology in 1973, the reins were handed over to Des who remained in that post until 1978. (Keepers of a department and Curators of museums were subsequently re-designated as Curators and Directors respectively.) He spent until 1974 collecting, processing and doing research on zoological specimens and undertaking an avifaunal survey of the Umtali Municipal Area, in particular the nightjars. Field expeditions took him all over Rhodesia and Malawi, and to parts of Zambia, Mozambique and Kenya. Detailed fieldwork on nightjars was carried out 50 km south of Umtali for several months each year from 1972 to 1975. After 1974, he focussed on Museum administration and development. As was his approach to all tasks, Des accepted the challenge with relish and introduced many new concepts and ideas into the running of the museum and, especially, the manner in which it interacted with the local community. This was a novel idea and Des was ahead of his time in this respect. He maintained that he wanted to dispel the stereotypical image of a Museum Curator as a bespectacled man in a white dust coat with a yellow duster in hand! Des correctly understood that for a museum to be successful in a small community, the local population needed to share and participate in its activities. To this end he created the Umtali Museum Scientific and Cultural Association (UMSCA), which all the small and fragmented clubs and societies in the city were invited to join. Under UMSCA’s ‘umbrella’, the clubs that were not viable on their own, joined forces, had a permanent meeting place, and contributed to a monthly magazine produced and distributed by the museum. Clubs were encouraged to hold exhibitions at the museum, in particular the Manicaland Artists Society, and an annual event was held at which all members put on a display for the public. This concept gave the community a strong sense of ‘belonging’ to the museum and dispelled the myth of it being seen as an ivory tower institution. Des also recognised that to overcome the perception that the museum’s exhibits were static and unchanging thereby making repeated visits unnecessary, a programme of temporary exhibitions would provide regular stimulus to visit. This idea developed into a lasting relationship with the National Gallery in Harare whereby all their travelling art exhibitions visited Mutare (Umtali was renamed Mutare after independence in 1980), effectively turning Mutare Museum into an outreach arm of the Gallery. While Des was primarily a scientific researcher at heart, his administrative skills were recognised when the incumbent Executive Director of National Museums and Monuments (NMMZ) resigned in 1978 and Des was appointed to the post. This meant relocating from Mutare to Harare, which was a considerable sacrifice as Des and his wife Joy (née Stopforth) had made Mutare their home. However, Des embraced the new position with vigour. In 1978 he was also accepted by the University of Natal (Pietermaritzburg, South Africa) for a special MSc (Zoology) degree on the basis of his record of research and publication. He was awarded the degree in 1984. One of his first accomplishments as Executive Director was to negotiate the return of the soapstone Zimbabwe bird housed in the South African Museum in Cape Town to its rightful home in Zimbabwe. This was achieved by offering in exchange a collection of Hymenoptera type specimens from the Entomological Collection at the National Museum in Bulawayo. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
Ostrich由NISC(Pty)Ltd和Informa UK Limited(交易名称为Taylor&Francis Group)共同出版。Hilery Desmond Jackson,又名Desmond,是Clifford和Pat Jackson的独子。1935年3月9日,他出生在南非德兰士瓦州的巴尔福尔。1951年,他以优异的数学成绩被录取。他早期的工作生涯包括在比勒陀利亚的司法部工作,然后在威特班克的加冕煤矿工作,在那里他是一名学习官员,主要从事调查工作。1954年,他攻读了采矿工程学士学位的第一年,1955年回到加冕煤矿。1956年,他在约翰内斯堡市担任技术助理,主要从事道路布局、污水处理和水网的勘测和绘图工作。他以同样的身份在威特班克呆了两年。1959年,德斯加入位于索尔兹伯里(现哈拉雷)的南罗得西亚(现津巴布韦)粮食营销委员会,担任规划官员,并一直任职至1969年。作为一个年轻人,德斯花了很多时间飞行娱乐和观鸟。后者最终成为他的主要追求,并导致了他的鸟类学生涯。1970年,他被罗德西亚国家博物馆聘为乌姆塔利的动物管理员。1973年,长期任职的乌姆塔利博物馆馆长唐纳德·布罗德利(Donald Broadley)选择放弃行政职务,重新担任Herpetology管理员时,权力移交给了德斯,他一直担任该职位,直到1978年。(一个部门的管理员和博物馆的馆长随后分别被重新指定为馆长和馆长。)直到1974年,他一直在收集、处理和研究动物标本,并对乌姆塔利市辖区进行鸟类调查,尤其是夜壶。实地考察将他带到了罗德西亚和马拉维,以及赞比亚、莫桑比克和肯尼亚的部分地区。从1972年到1975年,每年在乌姆塔利以南50公里处对夜壶进行几个月的详细实地调查。1974年后,他专注于博物馆的管理和发展。正如他处理所有任务的方法一样,德斯津津有味地接受了挑战,并在博物馆的运营中引入了许多新的概念和想法,尤其是博物馆与当地社区互动的方式。这是一个新颖的想法,德斯在这方面走在了时代的前面。他坚持说,他想消除博物馆馆长的刻板印象,他是一个戴眼镜的人,穿着白色防尘服,手里拿着黄色抹布!Des正确地理解,博物馆要想在一个小社区取得成功,当地民众需要分享和参与其活动。为此,他创建了乌姆塔利博物馆科学文化协会(UMSCA),邀请该市所有小型和分散的俱乐部和协会加入。在UMSCA的“保护伞”下,那些无法独立生存的俱乐部联合起来,拥有一个永久的会议场所,并为博物馆制作和发行的月刊撰稿。鼓励俱乐部在博物馆举办展览,特别是马尼卡兰艺术家协会,并举办年度活动,所有成员都向公众展示。这一概念让社区对博物馆产生了强烈的“归属感”,并消除了博物馆被视为象牙塔机构的神话。Des还认识到,为了克服人们认为博物馆的展品是静态的、不变的,从而使重复参观变得没有必要,临时展览计划将定期刺激游客参观。这一想法发展成为与哈拉雷国家美术馆的持久关系,他们所有的巡回艺术展览都访问了穆塔雷(1980年独立后,乌姆塔利更名为穆塔雷),有效地将穆塔雷博物馆变成了美术馆的外联部门。虽然德斯本质上主要是一名科学研究人员,但当现任国家博物馆和古迹执行主任于1978年辞职,德斯被任命为该职位时,他的管理技能得到了认可。这意味着从穆塔雷搬到哈拉雷,这是一个相当大的牺牲,因为德斯和他的妻子Joy(née Stopforth饰)把穆塔雷作为了他们的家。然而,德斯充满活力地接受了这个新职位。1978年,根据他的研究和出版记录,他还被纳塔尔大学(南非彼得马里茨堡)录取,获得了动物学硕士学位。他于1984年获得该学位。他担任执行主任的第一个成就是谈判将开普敦南非博物馆收藏的皂石津巴布韦鸟归还其在津巴布韦的合法家园。这是通过交换布拉瓦约国家博物馆昆虫学收藏馆的膜翅目标本来实现的。虽然这主要是一个政治上权宜之计的讣告
Hilery Desmond Jackson: ornithologist and museologist
Ostrich is co-published by NISC (Pty) Ltd and Informa UK Limited (trading as Taylor & Francis Group) Hilery Desmond Jackson, called Desmond and known as Des, was the only son of Clifford and Pat Jackson. He was born on 9 March 1935, in Balfour, Transvaal South Africa. He matriculated in 1951 with a distinction in mathematics. His early working career featured stints at the Department of Justice in Pretoria, then Coronation Collieries in Witbank where he was a Learner Official, doing mainly surveying. He spent 1954 doing the first year of a BSc (Mining Engineering) before returning to Coronation Collieries in 1955. He worked for the City of Johannesburg in 1956 as Technical Assistant doing surveying and drafting, mainly on road layouts, sewerage and water reticulations. He spent two years in Witbank in the same capacity. In 1959, Des joined the Grain Marketing Board of Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) in Salisbury (now Harare) as a planning officer, and remained there until 1969. As a young man, Des spent much time flying for recreation and bird watching. The latter eventually became his primary pursuit and led to his career in ornithology. He was hired by the National Museums of Rhodesia as Keeper of Zoology in Umtali in 1970 and, when the long serving Curator of Umtali Museum (Donald Broadley) opted to relinquish his administrative role and revert to Keeper of Herpetology in 1973, the reins were handed over to Des who remained in that post until 1978. (Keepers of a department and Curators of museums were subsequently re-designated as Curators and Directors respectively.) He spent until 1974 collecting, processing and doing research on zoological specimens and undertaking an avifaunal survey of the Umtali Municipal Area, in particular the nightjars. Field expeditions took him all over Rhodesia and Malawi, and to parts of Zambia, Mozambique and Kenya. Detailed fieldwork on nightjars was carried out 50 km south of Umtali for several months each year from 1972 to 1975. After 1974, he focussed on Museum administration and development. As was his approach to all tasks, Des accepted the challenge with relish and introduced many new concepts and ideas into the running of the museum and, especially, the manner in which it interacted with the local community. This was a novel idea and Des was ahead of his time in this respect. He maintained that he wanted to dispel the stereotypical image of a Museum Curator as a bespectacled man in a white dust coat with a yellow duster in hand! Des correctly understood that for a museum to be successful in a small community, the local population needed to share and participate in its activities. To this end he created the Umtali Museum Scientific and Cultural Association (UMSCA), which all the small and fragmented clubs and societies in the city were invited to join. Under UMSCA’s ‘umbrella’, the clubs that were not viable on their own, joined forces, had a permanent meeting place, and contributed to a monthly magazine produced and distributed by the museum. Clubs were encouraged to hold exhibitions at the museum, in particular the Manicaland Artists Society, and an annual event was held at which all members put on a display for the public. This concept gave the community a strong sense of ‘belonging’ to the museum and dispelled the myth of it being seen as an ivory tower institution. Des also recognised that to overcome the perception that the museum’s exhibits were static and unchanging thereby making repeated visits unnecessary, a programme of temporary exhibitions would provide regular stimulus to visit. This idea developed into a lasting relationship with the National Gallery in Harare whereby all their travelling art exhibitions visited Mutare (Umtali was renamed Mutare after independence in 1980), effectively turning Mutare Museum into an outreach arm of the Gallery. While Des was primarily a scientific researcher at heart, his administrative skills were recognised when the incumbent Executive Director of National Museums and Monuments (NMMZ) resigned in 1978 and Des was appointed to the post. This meant relocating from Mutare to Harare, which was a considerable sacrifice as Des and his wife Joy (née Stopforth) had made Mutare their home. However, Des embraced the new position with vigour. In 1978 he was also accepted by the University of Natal (Pietermaritzburg, South Africa) for a special MSc (Zoology) degree on the basis of his record of research and publication. He was awarded the degree in 1984. One of his first accomplishments as Executive Director was to negotiate the return of the soapstone Zimbabwe bird housed in the South African Museum in Cape Town to its rightful home in Zimbabwe. This was achieved by offering in exchange a collection of Hymenoptera type specimens from the Entomological Collection at the National Museum in Bulawayo. While this was principally a politically expedient Obituary
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