Marwell Hall, March 2016
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Date opened | 1972 |
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Location | Owslebury, Hampshire, England, United Kingdom |
Coordinates | 50°59′35.39″N 1°16′39.85″W / 50.9931639°N 1.2777361°WCoordinates: 50°59′35.39″N 1°16′39.85″W / 50.9931639°N 1.2777361°W |
Land area | 140 acres (57 ha) |
No. of animals | 1707+ (2011) |
No. of species | 188 (2011) |
Annual visitors | 511,000 (2006) |
Memberships | BIAZA,EAZA,WAZA,IUCN |
Major exhibits | Tropical World, Roof of the World, Into Africa, Heart of Africa, Life in the Trees, Wild Explorers, African Valley, Fur-Feathers-Scales. |
Website | http://www.marwell.org.uk |
Marwell Zoo is a 140-acre (57 ha) zoo situated at Owslebury near Winchester, in the English county of Hampshire. It is owned and run by the registered charity Marwell Wildlife. The zoo is home to over 1,200 animals of 135 different species. The charity undertakes a range of educational and conservation activities, with a particular focus on Africa in addition to work from its base.
The zoo was founded by John Knowles, opening in 1972. It was one of the earliest zoos in Europe to place an emphasis on animal conservation. Within a few years of its establishment, it became an important breeding centre for several species, some (e.g. the Mongolian wild horse) already extinct in the wild, others (e.g. the snow leopard and Siberian tiger) close to extinction.
The park is situated in the estate of Marwell Hall, a Grade I listed building originally built in 1320 by Walter Woodlock and largely rebuilt in 1816 by William Long. In the 1500s, the Hall belonged to the Seymour family, and there is a local tradition that Henry VIII married Jane Seymour there. Between September 1941 and March 1944, Cunliffe-Owen Aircraft used the area (part of the Managing Director's personal estate) as an airfield to support the manufacture of military aircraft at its nearby factory in Eastleigh. After the end of World War II, the area was returned to agricultural use until the establishment of the zoo.
In 1977, a giraffe called Victor tore a muscle in his leg, collapsed on his stomach, and was unable to get up. The press suggested that he had slipped while trying to mate and compared his situation to the splits. All attempts to get him on his feet failed, and his plight became a major international news story. Portsmouth Dockyard made a hoist to attempt to raise him onto his feet. He died of a heart attack very shortly afterward in the arms of his keeper Ruth. The publicity turned Marwell into a major tourist attraction, and interest was revived the following summer, when Victor's mate, Dribbles, gave birth to a female calf named Victoria.