Thomas Haining Gillespie[1]FRSE FSZS (3 October 1876 – 3 August 1967) was a Scottish solicitor, zoological administrator, and broadcaster. He was the founder of
Edinburgh Zoo and of its parent organisation the
Royal Zoological Society of Scotland.[2] As a broadcaster on the children's radio programme
Children's Hour he was known as "the zoo man", giving talks and answering questions on zoological matters.
Life
Tom Gillespie was born in
Dumfries on 3 October 1876. His father was Thomas Haining Gillespie and his mother Julia Ann Satchell. He was educated in private schools and at
Edinburgh University. He married Mary Elizabeth Gamble in 1920. They had no children and he died on 3 August 1967.[3] At his own request, his body was bequeathed to medical research.[4] His recreations were listed as 'reading, writing, music and photography'.[3]
Gillespie qualified as a solicitor in 1899,[3] but he had a strong interest in
zoology and devoted his spare time to his dream of establishing a
zoological park in Scotland. The cold climate presented an obstacle, but Gillespie was encouraged by the work of pioneering zoologists like
Carl Hagenbeck and in 1909 he founded what was to become the
Royal Zoological Society of Scotland. He carefully selected a site in central Edinburgh which would provide both favourable conditions for the animals and easy access for visitors, and with the help of
Edinburgh City Council the site was purchased in 1913.[5] Gillespie's efforts came to fruition with the opening on 22 July 1913 of the Scottish National Zoological Park—now known simply as
Edinburgh Zoo.[6] He served as director of the zoo from 1913 to 1950 and as secretary to the zoological society.[3]
Gillespie was well known on the Scottish
Children's Hour radio programme as 'the Zoo Man' who gave talks about the animals in
Edinburgh Zoo and who answered nature questions in a panel programme produced by
Kathleen Garscadden. His contributions to these
Children's Hour programmes began in 1926 when they were broadcast by the Edinburgh and Glasgow stations of the BBC.[8] He was, in those early years, probably not billed as 'the Zoo Man' of the BBC - that title, for English stations at least, was given to
David Seth-Smith who broadcast on Children's Hour and published books as 'Zoo Man of the BBC' in the 1930s. Gillespie's early books did not include the Zoo man nickname. However Gillespie was, by the late 1950s, being described as the 'Zoo man of the Scottish BBC' and he published books under that name from 1960 onwards.[9] His early radio talks were published in a series of 'Zoo Tales' books which are listed below. He appears in a group photograph with Garscadden, the 'Bird Man of the BBC' (James Douglas-Home), and the 'Hut Man of the BBC' (
Gilbert D. Fisher).[10]
Zoo Ways and Whys. With a foreword by Professor Sir J. Arthur Thomson. Illustrated with photographs by M.E. Gillespie. London:
Herbert Jenkins, 1930.[11]
More Zoo Ways. With photographs by M.E. Gillespie. London:
Herbert Jenkins, 1931.
A Book of
King Penguins. With 60 illustrations from photographs by M. E. Gillespie. London:
Herbert Jenkins, 1932.
Is It Cruel? A Study of the Condition of Captive and Performing Animals. With illustrations. London:
Herbert Jenkins, 1934.
Popular Official Guide to the Scottish Zoological Park. With plan of the Park and illustrations, etc. Edinburgh:
Royal Zoological Society of Scotland, 1934.
Zoo Tales. Illustrated by William Walls. Edinburgh & London: Oliver & Boyd, 1936
The Way of a Serpent. A popular account of the habits of snakes. With illustrations. London:
Herbert Jenkins, 1937.
Animal Stories. Illustrated by Joan Sharp. Glasgow: Collins, 1938.
The Scottish National Zoological Park. Cheltenham: J. Burrow & Co. [1938].
Zoo-Man Tales. Illustrated by Len Fullerton. New York: Taplinger Pub. Co., 1960.
Zoo-Man Again. Illustrated by Len Fullerton. New York: Taplinger Pub. Co., 1961.
More Zoo Tales. Illustrated by Ralph Thompson. Edinburgh & London: Oliver & Boyd, 1962
The Story of the Edinburgh Zoo. The
Royal Zoological Society of Scotland and the Scottish National Zoological Park. An account of their origin and progress. [With plates.] Slains, Aberdeenshire: Michael Slains Publishers, 1964.
Our Friends the Spiders. Illustrated by David Pratt. Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd: Edinburgh, 1965.
Scots Magazine Articles
"A Wolf Colony in Edinburgh", Vol. XIX, no. 3, June 1933, pp. 212–215.
"Springtime at the Zoo", Vol. XXIII, no. 3, June 1935, pp. 176–180.
"The Zoo in War-Time", Vol. XXXIV, no. 3, Dec. 1940, pp. 197–202.
"Do You Know? A Nature Quiz", Vol. LVII, No. 1, April 1952, p. 1, (Answers on p. 71).
References
^His name has been previously misspelled as 'Thomas Hailing Gillespie'. The correct spelling is confirmed in both his birth and death certificates. Cf. Births, marriages and deaths information available at the General Register Office for Scotland, Scotland's People Centre in Edinburgh, and also at
http://scotlandspeople.gov.uk.
^"Obituary – Mr. Thomas Gillespie". The Scotsman. 5 August 1967. p. 5.
^
abcdeWho Was Who, 1961–1970. Vol. VI (2 ed.). London: A & C Black. 1972. p. 428.
ISBN9780713620085.
^"Notice of death". The Scotsman. 5 August 1967. p. 16.
^Gillespie, Thomas (1930). Zoo Ways and Whys. H. Jenkins. p. 5. The contents of this volume were, in their origin, among the 'Zoo Talks' which I have broadcast, in the last four years, during the Children's Hour of the Edinburgh and Glasgow stations of the BBC.
^As is evidenced by the issues of the
Radio Times for the period.
^Edwards, Roger (December 2000).
"Constructing the new zoo". Glasgow Zoo. Archived from
the original on 1 August 2012. Retrieved 30 January 2012. He is referred to as 'Tom H. Gillespie' in reference to this group photograph.