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Macleay Museum Macleay Museum i(A39141 works by) (Organisation) assertion
Born: Established: Sydney, New South Wales, ;
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BiographyHistory

'The Macleay Museum is a museum of natural history, ethnography and history. Named in honour of William Sharp Macleay, the Macleay Museum is also a museum of the Macleay family and their centuries of commitment to scientific knowledge and museums.

The Macleay collections began as a collection of insects assembled in the late 18th century by Alexander Macleay. On his appointment as Colonial Secretary for NSW in 1826, Alexander brought the collection to Australia. At the time it was one of the largest privately owned insect collections in the world (today there are more than half a million insect specimens in the collection).

Alexander's son William Sharp Macleay, a leading naturalist in 19th century Australia substantially increased the size of the collection during his lifetime. The collection then passed to William Sharp's cousin William John Macleay, on the condition that on his death he should donate the collection in William Sharp's name to either the University of Cambridge or The University of Sydney to promote the study of science.

By the time the collection began to arrive at The University of Sydney in 1888 and was housed in the purpose-built museum it occupies to this day, it had expanded considerably and took two years to move. The Macleays and subsequent collectors have expanded the original insect collections to include most branches of natural history as well as significant historic ethnographic material acquired from indigenous peoples of Australia and the Pacific region. The museum has also expanded to include important collections of historic photography and scientific instruments.'

Source: The University of Sydney website http://sydney.edu.au/museums/about/macleay.shtml (Sighted: 31/05/2011)

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Last amended 23 Jun 2011 16:01:26
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