Biographical dictionary

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

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Name Dates Biography
EDMONDS, Richard 1801-1886 Published ‘The Death Watch; the ticking of Anobium’ in Magazine of Natural History, 7, 1834, pp.468-469. (MD 10/02)
EDMONDS, T. Sold 361 Coleoptera from Chile including the type of Cicindela gormazi [?], to the NHM in 1882 (82.23). Presumably this is the solicitor father of Thomas Herbert (see below) since the latter's obituary, by Donisthorpe, mentions that his father ‘was chiefly a Lepidopterist [who]... collected many rare species in Peru’. Donisthorpe also mentions that Edmonds senior lived in Totnes, Devon, and collected beetles in this country which were included in his son's collection. (MD 10/02)
EDMONDS, Thomas Herbert 13 March 1887 - 30 April 1944 Born at Guildford, Surrey, the son of a solicitor (see T. Edmonds above), and educated at Ashburton Grammar School, Devon. He decided to become a solicitor himself and was articled to a firm in London. After qualifying, however, he moved to join a firm in Bath. He was called up during the first World War and after being wounded on the beaches at Gallipoli, he returned to live with his father at ‘Strathmore’, Totnes, south Devon, and to join his father's firm in which he became a partner. Edmonds, who was sometimes known as ‘The’ Edmonds because of his initials, never married. He died of heart failure when leaving his house to go on a fire alert, and was succeeded by two sisters. Edmonds added a number of species to the British list including (Cartodere) Dienerella separanda (Reitter) (ERJV., 42, 1930, p.148); Gymentron plantaginis Epph. (EMM., 66, 1930, p.110) Staphylinus winkleri Bernh. (ibid., 66, 1930, p.273) and Scopaeus abbreviatus Rey and Muls. (ibid., 68, 1932, pp.206-209. He also described four species as new to science, none of which has survived: Ceuthorrhynchus paulustre (ERJV.,42, 1930, pp.23-24); Cephennium pallidum (EMM.,67, 1931, p.272); Scopaeus gracilipes (ibid., 69, 1933, pp.7-10); and Tachys piceus (ibid., 70, 1934, pp.7-10). His other articles included a review of the genus Scopaeus Er. (ibid., 68, pp.206-209) and notes on the local Devon fauna which appeared in J. Torquay nat. Hist. Soc., eg. 4, 1924/25, pp.194, 281. Edmonds accompanied Donisthorpe on a number of trips to Windsor and is recorded to have been a great admirer of Miss Florence Kirk. Cephennium edmondsi was named after him by Donisthorpe. This is presumably the Edmonds referred to by Morley (1899) p.1. Edmonds' collection amounting to 10,000 specimens, which included material collected by his father, was acquired by Manchester through R.W.Lloyd in 1958. The data accompanying the collection is extremely poor, and the book which went with it has been lost. Many specimens without any data have been thrown out and others used for educational purposes. The remainder occupy 40 drawers. Most of the specimens are mounted on clear perspex and Colin Johnson told me that he thought it appeared to have been arranged by colour! A report on the collection was made by Donisthorpe and is also in the Museum. Apart from the above Hancock and Pettit (1981) note that there may be a small cabinet of Carabidae at York Museum which may have belonged to Edmonds, and that his manuscript material is in the Museum at Torquay. There is an obituary by Donisthorpe in EMM., 80, 1944, p.162, and a note by E.A.Cockayne in Proc.RESL., (C)9, 1945, p.47. (MD 10/02)
EDMONDSON, Thomas (Junior) Published ‘Note on the voracity of Dytiscus marginalis’ in Zool.,2, 1844, pp.701-702. (MD 10/02)
EDMUNDS Lived in Devon. There are specimens bearing this name in the D.G.Hall Collection at Baldock. (I am grateful to Trevor James for this information). (Could this be an error for Edmonds perhaps?) (MD 10/02)
EDMUNDS, Miss R.A. Mentioned by Morley (1899) p.iv. (MD 10/02)
EDWARDS, C.L. Gave 250 insects including 19 Coleoptera which he had collected in Australia, Tasmania, New Zealand and Fiji to the NHM in 1923 (1923.44 and 1923.408). (MD 10/02)
EDWARDS, E(C?).E. Gave 400 Coleoptera which he had collected in Mauritius to the NHM in 1899 (1899.257) and a further 150 in the following year (1900.21). (MD 10/02)
EDWARDS, Ellen Collected insects including Coleoptera in Canada which were givento the NHM by Claude Morley in 1912 (1912.506). (MD 10/02)
EDWARDS, Frederick Wallace 28 November 1888 - 15 November 1940 Well known Dipterist who was attached to the staff of the NHM. As one of the early members of the Letchworth Naturalists Society he also collected Coleoptera, and specimens are included in the collections of the N. Hertfordshire Museums (I am grateful to Trevor James for this information). Gilbert (1977) p.103, lists 15 obituaries and other notices. (MD 10/02)