Cheesman, Lucy Evelyn (1881–1969)
Cheesman, Lucy Evelyn (1881–1969)
English entomologist and explorer. Born 1881 in Westwell, Kent, England; died April 5, 1969.
As curator of insects for Zoological Society of London, provided animal talks for BBC's Children's Hour (1920–26); traveled to West Indies, Panama, Galápagos Islands, and South Pacific on St. George's Expedition (1924); went on independent expeditions to New Hebrides, Papua, Cyclops Mountains, Waigeu, Japan, Dutch New Guinea, and New Caledonia; publications include "Biogeographical Significance of Aneityum Island, New Hebrides" (1957), Everyday Doings of Insects (1924), The Great Little Insect (1924), Marooned in Du-Bu Cove (1949), and 2 autobiographies, Things Worthwhile (1957) and Time Well Spent (1960); contributed more than 50,000 insect specimens to British Museum of Natural History. Made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE, 1955).