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Thomas Bainbrigge Fletcher


Thomas Bainbrigge Fletcher (March 25, 1878 – 1950) was an English entomologist. Although an amateur lepidopterist who worked in the Royal Navy, he became an expert on the "microlepidoptera" and was appointed as the second Imperial Entomologist in India.

His father William Bainbrigge Fletcher was a Fleet Surgeon in the Royal Navy (retired 1890). Thomas became a naval paymaster until he retired in 1915. While in the navy, he joined the Percy Sladen Trust Expedition to the Indian Ocean and was appointed Imperial entomologist in India, succeeding Harold Maxwell-Lefroy at the Imperial Agricultural Research Institute at Pusa. Although lacking academic qualifications, he was a meticulous naturalist and very careful on matters of systematics and taxonomic nomenclature. His work as head of entomological research in India was initially on identifying work that had already been done and that which was ongoing. By conducting meetings of researchers he ensured that duplication was avoided. He produced a list of publications on Indian entomology and a catalogue of Indian insects. He also worked out the life-histories of many moth species in the families Gelechidae, Cosmopterygidae, Neopseutidae and Tortricidae and produced A List of Generic Names used for Microlepidoptera (1929). He also wrote several more general works on entomology including Some South Indian Insects (1914), a veterinary entomology for India and hints on collecting and preserving insects. His knowledge of classical Greek, Latin and French and a popular style of writing also allowed him to write for lay audiences. His book on the birds of an Indian garden with C.M. Inglis was meant for non-specialist readers.

Fletcher was a Fellow of the Linnean Society, the Royal Entomological Society, Zoological Society of London and a president of the Cotteswold naturalists' field club. He married Esme Violet Hollingbery at Saidpur, Uttar Pradesh, on February 17, 1917. His wife left India and was hospitalized in London for many years and in 1947, he suffered from a stroke that left him partly paralyzed on the right side. He donated the bulk of Rodborough Common in Gloucestershire to the National Trust in 1937 (after the National Trust declined an earlier offer in 1935). In 1949 he filed for bankruptcy but his assets were valued at £4762, enough to pay off his debts of £1119.


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