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HEDLEY, CHARLES (1862-1926), naturalist,
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son of the Rev. Canon T. Hedley, was born at the vicarage, Masham, Yorkshire,
on 27 February 1862. On account of delicate health he had only two years at
Eastbourne College, but his education was continued by his father, a fellow of
Trinity College, Cambridge. While wintering in the south of France he met George French
Angas (q.v.) who gave him a letter of introduction to Dr G.
Bennett (q.v.) of Sydney. In 1881 Hedley went to New Zealand and in
September 1882 to Sydney. He was suffering from asthma and after trying the dry
interior found he was in better health when near the sea. He took up an oyster
lease at Moreton Bay, Queensland, and then tried fruit-growing at Boyne Island,
Port Curtis. His first published paper, "Uses of Some Queensland Plants", was
published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society of Queensland in 1888,
and in the same year he came to Brisbane. He did some voluntary work for the
Queensland museum and on 1 January 1889 was appointed a supernumerary officer of
it. In July he became honorary secretary of the Royal Society of Queensland, and
in 1890, at the invitation of the administrator, Sir
William Macgregor (q.v.), he visited New Guinea, did some exploring, and
made important collections. He was much interested in New Guinea but contracted
fever and towards the end of 1890 went to Sydney. He made his home there for the
rest of his life. In April 1891 he joined the Australian museum staff as
assistant in charge of land shells, and about five years later was appointed
conchologist. Early in 1896 the local committee of the "Funafuti Coral Reef
Boring Expedition of the Royal Society" (London) suggested to the trustees of
the Australian museum that one of their officers should accompany the
expedition, and Hedley was selected. He left in May, and during his stay on
Funafuti made an interesting collection, particularly of Invertebrate and
Ethnological objects. The descriptions of these were published in Memoir III
of the Australian Museum Sydney between 1896 and 1900. Hedley himself was
responsible for the "General Account of the Atoll of Funafuti", "The Ethnology
of Funafuti" and "The Mollusca of Funafuti". He also contributed two articles in
1902 and 1903 on the "Mollusca" included in the Scientific Results of the
Trawling Expedition of H.M.C.S. "Thetis", published as Memoir IV of the
Australian Museum Sydney.
Hedley was a keen explorer and visited most of the coast of eastern
Australia, and the Gulf of Carpentaria, New Guinea, New Caledonia, and the
Ellice Group. In later life he visited Canada and Alaska (1922), and Africa
(1925). His chief interest was in the study of the Great Barrier Reef. He had
become assistant curator of the Australian museum in 1908 and in 1920 he
succeeded R.
Etheridge Jnr. (q.v.) as principal keeper of collections. He resigned in
1925 to become scientific director of the Great Barrier Reef Investigation
Committee. Between April and August 1926 he was supervizing the sinking of a
bore on Michaelmas Reef near Cairns, and he returned to Sydney in August
intending to visit Japan in connexion with the third Pan-Pacific Science
Congress. Not being well he decided to abandon the journey, and though it was
hoped that a rest would restore his health, he died suddenly on 14 September
1926. He married and left a widow and an adopted daughter.
Hedley was on the council of the Linnean Society of New South Wales from 1897
to 1924 and was president from 1909 to 1911; he was on the council for 16 years
of the Royal Society of New South Wales and was president in 1914; he was a
vice-president of the Malacological Society of London from 1923. He was awarded
the David Syme prize in 1916, and in 1925 received the Clarke memorial medal
from the Royal Society of New South Wales. A man of invariable courtesy and
kindliness, held in the highest regard by contemporary scientists, his knowledge
was always at the disposal of younger naturalists and visiting scientists. His
work, and especially in regard to the zoo-geographical history of the Pacific,
gave him a high place among Australian zoologists. A list of 156 published
research papers written by himself, and 15 in association with others, was
printed in 1924.
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