Josephine Gordon Rich
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Josephine Gordon Rich later Haswell (1866–1940) was a New Zealand
zoologist Zoology ()The pronunciation of zoology as is usually regarded as nonstandard, though it is not uncommon. is the branch of biology that studies the Animal, animal kingdom, including the anatomy, structure, embryology, evolution, Biological clas ...
and one of only four New Zealand women who published results of her scientific work before 1901.


Early life and education

Rich was born in 1866 in
Spaxton Spaxton is a small village and civil parish on the Quantock Hills, Quantocks in the Sedgemoor district of Somerset, South West England. History Spaxton was part of the Hundred (county subdivision), hundred of Cannington (hundred), Cannington. T ...
, England, the youngest of five children of William Gordon Rich (1829–1912) and his wife. Her father was a runholder and Justice of the Peace in Southland, but Gordon Rich was born in England, where the family may have travelled for the education of Josephine's older brothers.


Scientific work

In 1891, Rich achieved the highest grade in all her first year classes in zoology, botany, general biology, and practical biology from the
University of Otago , image_name = University of Otago Registry Building2.jpg , image_size = , caption = University clock tower , motto = la, Sapere aude , mottoeng = Dare to be wise , established = 1869; 152 years ago , type = Public research collegiate u ...
. Rich does not appear to have graduated despite her high grades, but this may be because she was not eligible to graduate, having been homeschooled. In 1889/1890, Dunedin hosted the New Zealand and South Seas Exhibition, for which Parker designed an exhibit on animal evolution. Rich contributed, among other drawings, five wall diagrams on extinct animals, which were described by a reporter as "instructive". The
Otago Museum Tūhura Otago Museum is located in the city centre of Dunedin, New Zealand. It is adjacent to the University of Otago campus in Dunedin North, 1,500 metres northeast of the city centre. It is one of the city's leading attractions and has one of t ...
collection contains a set of 32 scientific water-colour and pen-and-ink drawings that Rich donated in 1893. Rich's drawings were informed by her dissections and preparation of specimens in the laboratory. She presented eleven stuffed fish to the Canterbury Museum in 1893, and supplied mollusc specimens to zoologist
Henry Suter Henry Suter (born Hans Heinrich Suter, 9 March 1841 – 31 July 1918) was a Swiss-born New Zealand zoologist, naturalist, palaeontologist, and malacologist. Biography Henry Suter was born on 9 March 1841 in Riesbach, Zurich, Switzerland, and ...
, who almost named a new species after her. Rich was one of only four New Zealand women who published results of her scientific work before 1901. Her work on spiny lobsters ('' Palinurus edwardsii'') was co-authored by her teacher
Thomas Jeffery Parker Thomas Jeffery Parker F.R.S. (17 October 1850 – 7 November 1897) was a zoologist who worked in New Zealand. Biography Parker was born at 124 Tachbrook Street in London on 17 October 1850 the son of the anatomist William Kitchen Parker. He stu ...
in 1893. The paper described in detail the entire musculature of the animal; it was read before the
Otago Institute Otago (, ; mi, Ōtākou ) is a region of New Zealand located in the southern half of the South Island administered by the Otago Regional Council. It has an area of approximately , making it the country's second largest local government reg ...
in 1892 and published in the ''Maclay Memorial Volume'' of the New South Wales Linnean Society in 1893. Rich provided 25 of the 27 images in the paper, which were described as "remarkably clear" by a reviewer in the London review journal ''Natural Science''.


Later life

On 28 August 1894, Josephine married the Australian
William Aitcheson Haswell William Aitcheson Haswell (5 August 1854 – 24 January 1925) was a Scottish-Australian zoologist specialising in crustaceans, winner of the 1915 Clarke Medal. His zoological author abbreviation is Haswell. Taxa authored by him are given in :T ...
(1854–1925), a friend of Thomas Jeffrey Parker, in Christchurch, New Zealand, and subsequently moved to Australia. Haswell was a professor of biology at the University of Sydney, and although Rich does not appear to have published after her marriage, she assisted her husband in his work. She contributed nine drawings to the ''Textbook of Zoology'', co-authored by Parker and Haswell and published in 1897. Parker described Rich's drawing of a rabbit as "magnificent". The Haswells had a son in 1897, who died at 5 months old, and a daughter, Mary Margaret, born 1899. Rich died in a private hospital in Darlinghurst on 6 September 1940. She was survived by her daughter. In 2017, she was featured as one of the Royal Society Te Apārangi's
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.


Works

* Parker, T
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Jeffery, & Rich, Josephine Gordon. "Observations on the myology of Palinurus Edwardsii, Hutton". 892.N. S. Wales Linn. Soc. (Macleay Mem. Vol.), 1893, 159-178.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Rich, Josephine Gordon 1866 births 1940 deaths 20th-century New Zealand zoologists Women zoologists University of Otago alumni 20th-century New Zealand women scientists 19th-century New Zealand women scientists British emigrants to New Zealand