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William James Clarke

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William James Clarke
Clarke in 1900 with a pet python
Born1871
Died22 October 1945
Occupation(s)shopkeeper, taxidermist, museum curator

William James Clarke FZS (1871– 22 October 1945) was a naturalist and folklorist from Scarborough in North Riding of Yorkshire. He was the keeper of a fishing tackle shop, a taxidermist and a dealer in natural history requisites. For some years he worked as a curator of the Rotunda Museum in Scarborough.[1]

Biography

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Clarke was born in Scarborough where his father Richard ran Clarke's Aerated Waters and Bottling Company, founded in 1889.[2] He went to Miss Mary Graham's nursery and Mr Wheater's grammar school. He became interested in natural history after a meeting with George Massee, joining the latter's naturalists' club at the Unitarian Church in 1880. He then studied at Frederick York Richmond's school where Clarke set up an aquarium and museum. At the age of 12 he gave a talk on reptiles at the Grand Hotel to raise funds for the Union Jack Field Club of the school. He later joined the Scarborough Field Naturalists Society, presiding over it in 1894. He apprenticed at a printing press and later started a store dealing with natural history specimens on 44 Huntriss Row. Apart from natural history, he also took an interest in charms and amulets and began to collect them.[2]

He was a curator at the Rotunda Museum from 1913 to 1915 and gave away his collections to the museum after his death.[3] Clarke found a giant squid which was found on the beach on 14 January 1933 which was described as a new species Architeuthis clarkei by G.C. Robson although that name is now treated as a synonym.[4][5]

Naturalist

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As a boy Clarke was "a lover of natural history, and he alarmed his master by taking frogs, toads and grass snakes in his pockets to business. Later in life for many years he kept and carefully recorded the habits of two large snakes, a python and a boa-constrictor, which he always said got to know him."[5]

In 1892 he joined the Yorkshire Naturalists' Union.[5] At the age of 23, W.J. Clarke became the president of the Scarborough Field Naturalists Society in 1894. The next year he worked as the secretary.[6] From 1902 he was a Fellow of the Zoological Society of London.[7]

During his life Clarke made many contributions to The Naturalist. He also contributed to The Zoologist.

Folklorist

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Apart from his interests in natural history, Clarke was also a folklorist, more especially a collector of charms, and amulets. His collection of charms in the Scarborough museum is still "one of the most intriguing held within the Scarborough Collections, due to the breadth of material represented and the insight it offers into past people's lives based on their belief system, fears and hopes."[8]

The heyday of folklore collecting in Britain started around 1900. Edward Lovett was one of the renowned collectors, with whom Clarke was in close contact. Clarke's collection held charms, that were "said to bring 'good luck', 'good fortune', or specific advantages–such as abundance, love, strength, protection, success in gambling, long life, fertility, and safety in childbirth or war." The amulets in the collection were "expected to repel the evil eye, witches, demons and nightmares, sickness and discomfort (ranging from venereal disease to loose teeth), and to guard against fire, flood, theft, and hunger, travel accidents, drowning, and being struck by lightning."[9]

Bibliography

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  • wikisource logo Clarke, W.J. (1898). "Notes from Scarborough". The Zoologist. 4th series, vol 2 (issue 679, January—section 'Notes and Queries'): 28.
  • Clarke, W.J.; Robson, G.C. (1929). "Notes on the stranding of giant squids on the north-east coast of England". Proceedings of the Malacological Society. 18 (4): 154–158. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.mollus.a063962. (with a map)
  • Clarke, W.J. (1933). "Giant squid (new to science) at Scarborough". The Naturalist: A Monthly Journal of Natural History for the North of England. 58 (691): 157–158. (with 1 photo)
  • —— (1939). "Giant squid near Scarborough". The Naturalist: A Monthly Journal of Natural History for the North of England. 64 (691): 136–137. (with 1 photo) (Reprinted: —— (1939). "Giant squid near Scarborough". Journal of Conchology. 21 (6): 163–164.)
  • Clarke, W.J. (1939). "Varieties of Mallard at Scarborough". The Naturalist: A Monthly Journal of Natural History for the North of England. 64 (691): 137–138. (with 1 photo)
  • —— (1940). "The Jubilee Anniversary of the Scarborough Field Naturalists' Society". The Naturalist. 65 (771): 67–68.
  • —— (1944). "A List of Yorkshire Marine Fishes". The Naturalist. 69 (810): 97–106.

References

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  1. ^ Cultiv8 (2011) states that Clarke was curator at the Rotunda Museum from 1913 to 1915. Birkhead, Axon & Middleton (2020) state that he was curator at Scarborough in 1906.
  2. ^ a b "The squid finder of Scarborough". The Scarborough News. 26 March 2012. Archived from the original on 25 February 2023.
  3. ^ Cadbury (2012), pp. 130.
  4. ^ Robson, G. C. (1933). "On Architeuthis clarkei, a new Species of Giant Squid, with Observations on the Genus". Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London. 103 (3): 681–697. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.1933.tb01614.x. ISSN 0370-2774.
  5. ^ a b c Cross (1946), p. 19.
  6. ^ "Presidents & secretaries of the Scarborough Field Naturalists Society". Scarborough Field Naturalists Society. Archived from the original on 16 August 2022. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
  7. ^ A List of the Fellows and Honorary, Foreign, and Corresponding Members and Medallists of the Zoological Society of London, corrected to May 31st, 1910. London: printed by William Clowes and Sons, Ltd. 2 September 1899. p. 32.
  8. ^ Dunne, Jennifer (16 February 2017). "The Clarke Charm Collection: Of Witch Bottles, Witch Cakes and Hag Stones". folklorethursday.com. Archived from the original on 25 February 2023.
  9. ^ Cadbury (2012), p. 124–125; although the writer speaks of Charles William Clarke (1871-1945), and sometimes William Charles Clarke, it is quite obvious that this is all about William James Clarke.

Sources

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