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Frances Pitt (25 January 1888 – 26 April 1964) was a British
naturalist Natural history is a domain of inquiry involving organisms, including animals, fungi, and plants, in their natural environment, leaning more towards observational than experimental methods of study. A person who studies natural history is cal ...
, author and a pioneer of wildlife photography. She wrote many books and numerous popular articles in periodicals on the lives of many wild animals by observations in the wild and in the process of raising and nursing injured animals. She lived at "The Albynes",
Shropshire Shropshire (; abbreviated SalopAlso used officially as the name of the county from 1974–1980. The demonym for inhabitants of the county "Salopian" derives from this name.) is a Ceremonial counties of England, ceremonial county in the West M ...
, three miles south of
Bridgnorth Bridgnorth is a market town and civil parish in Shropshire, England. The River Severn splits it into High Town and Low Town, the upper town on the right bank and the lower on the left bank of the River Severn. The population at the United Kingd ...
from 1903 until 1958 when she moved to Castle House, Harley near Much Wenlock.


Early life and education

Frances Pitt was born at Oldbury Grange, Shropshire before the family moved to Westwood in 1892. Her father William James Pitt, was the son of the vicar of the Parish of Malmesbury,
Wiltshire Wiltshire (; abbreviated to Wilts) is a ceremonial county in South West England. It borders Gloucestershire to the north, Oxfordshire to the north-east, Berkshire to the east, Hampshire to the south-east, Dorset to the south, and Somerset to ...
. She learnt to read and write from her mother and was tutored by a Mr Carter and a governess. Some of her early influences were the books by Ernest Thompson Seton.


Career

Her early books were based on experience in taking care of wild animals and these included ''Tommy White-Tag, the fox'' (1912) followed by more personal titles in a series called "The Library Of Animal Friends" which included ''Tom, my peacock''; ''Moses, my otter'' (1927) and ''Katie, my roving cat'' (1930). In ''Diana, My Badger'' published in 1929, she described her experience in raising a pair of baby
badger Badgers are medium-sized short-legged omnivores in the superfamily Musteloidea. Badgers are a polyphyletic rather than a natural taxonomic grouping, being united by their squat bodies and adaptions for fossorial activity rather than by the ...
s brought to her by a rabbit catcher. Of the pair, Diana and Jemima, Diana lived to return to the wild. In the early 1920s she wrote on the genetics and inheritance of colour patterning in Hereford cattle and on the traits of hybrids between ferrets and polecats. In 1934, she wrote on the increasing trends in badger populations. She also wrote on the topic of hunting in ''Hounds, horses & hunting'' (1948). Her book ''The Squirrel'' published in 1954 was based on an albino squirrel named "Mr Nuts". She was among the first (the first was Miss Phyllis Kelway) to breed harvest mice in captivity. She published ''Wild animals in Britain'' in 1939, and regularly wrote to comment and report on wildlife observations. In 1945, she reported the observations made by Lady Seton (wife of Sir Malcolm Seton) on the mass movements of water shrews. In 1949, she was included along with Peter Medawar and others in a committee to examine cruelty to wild animals which led to protests from the National Society for the Abolition of Cruel Sports who pointed out her position as a Master of Fox Hounds and as vice-president of the British Field Sports Society. In 1954, Edglets, a brand of tea sold by
Brooke Bond Brooke Bond is a brand of tea owned by Lipton Teas and Infusions, except in India, Nepal, and Indonesia where it is owned by Unilever. Brooke Bond was formerly an independent tea- trading and manufacturing company in the United Kingdom, known ...
included a series of illustrated cards with British birds photographed by Frances Pitt. Her collection of insects is now in the Ludlow Museum although the specimens lack dates and locality data. She was elected Fellow of the Linnean Society in 1951. She published ''Country years being a naturalist's memories of life in the English countryside and elsewhere'' in 1961, with many autobiographical notes.


Selected publications

Among the numerous books that Frances Pitt wrote are: * Tommy White-Tag, the fox (1912)
Wild creatures of garden and hedgerow
(1920)
Woodland creatures: Being Some Wild Life Studies
(1922) * Shetland pirates, and other wild life studies (1923) * Waterside creatures (1925) * Animal mind (1927) * The intelligence of animals (1931) * Scotty, the adventures of a highland fox (1932)
The naturalist on the prowl
(1934) * Birds and the sea (1935) * Woodpeckers * Wild life studies (1935) * Nature in the wild: a selection of the world's finest photographs (1936) * How to see nature (1940) * Jane Squirrel (1942) * Betty (1943) * Meet Us in the Garden (1946) * Friends in fur and feather (1946) * The year in the countryside (1947) * Hounds, horses & hunting (1948) * Follow me (1949) * Nature through the year (1950)


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Pitt, Frances 1888 births 1964 deaths 20th-century British women scientists 20th-century British women writers English naturalists English nature writers British nature photographers Women naturalists 20th-century British naturalists