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In 1827, when the idea for a museum was proposed, the impetus came from the desire to procure the 'many rare and curious specimens of Natural History' for naturalists in England. The early museum collections were acquired solely for display - for the edification and entertainment of the public. In 1832, Dr George Bennett, medical practitioner and naturalist, visited the Museum and described the infant institution in his 'Wanderings in New South Wales...'[1834]: 'the ornithological collection is by far the best, both for the number, and being beautifully stuffed and 'set up' in attitudes... There are also several of the mammalia, and reptiles of the colony in the collection.' Bennett was appointed Curator in 1835, and published the first catalogue of the Museum's collections in 1837: 'A Catalogue of the Specimens of Natural History and Miscellaneous Curiosities deposited in the Australian Museum'. William Holmes, first head of the Museum, was also its first collector. His career was brief as he was accidentally shot on 24 August 1831 while collecting at Moreton Bay in Queensland. Collectors after Holmes included John Roach, 'collector and bird stuffer', William Sheridan Wall, who collected along the Murrumbidgee and was later Curator, George Masters, who in the decade from 1864 collected in Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia, Tasmania and Lord Howe Island, and Alexander Morton, who collected throughout the 1870s-1890s. The early collectors were often trained taxidermists, but when collections began to be acquired for local research purposes, fieldwork became the responsibility of scientists.
The collection displayed in the Ethnographic Court at the Sydney International Exhibition in 1879, was lost in the Garden Palace fire in 1882. It is estimated 2,000 objects were lost. Ramsay actively sought new specimens, and by 1889, 7,500 new objects had been acquired. Sydney was a major port of call between the Pacific region and Europe, and the Museum traded in objects and specimens, by purchase or donation, with traders, ships captains, colonial officials, merchants, missionaries, and by an active exchange program with other museums and by field trips and participation in expeditions. Interest in Aboriginal culture remained low, and artefacts from Melanesia dominated the collection until the early 20th century. Change came with the work of Robert Etheridge, Curator from 1887 to 1891, who, although a palaeontologist, was interested in Aboriginal prehistory, carried out site excavations, and actively built up the anthropological collection. His assistant, W.W Thorpe, was appointed first Museum ethnologist in 1906, who was followed by Fred McCarthy who was Curator from until 1964. Until the 1870s, the specimens in the Museum's collection were individually labelled, and most were on public display in the 'cabinets of curiosities'. In 1877, Edward Palmer was employed to compile the first compilation Register of the existing collections. The Palmer Register was followed by 'A' and 'B' Registers, where all acquisitions were collectively registered. From 1886, separate specialist registers have been maintained, reflecting the major organism or object groups collected by the Museum. For many years, the Australian Museum was the only museum in colonial Australia. Although its primary collecting interest was in zoology and geology, it also acquired various historical objects and collections - in the 19th century, the Museum held a large numismatics collection (stamps and coins), and collections relating to the early history of the European exploration and colonisation of Australia.
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