Michael Clegg (naturalist) explained

Birth Name:Michael Clegg
Birth Date:19 February 1933
Birth Place:Birdwell, West Riding of Yorkshire, England
Occupation:
  • Museum curator
  • Naturalist
  • Radio broadcaster
  • Television presenter
Discipline:Natural Sciences
Workplaces:

Thomas Michael Clegg (19 February 1933 - 12 July 1995)[1] was a British museum curator, naturalist, and television presenter.[2] [3] [4]

Early life

Clegg was born in Birdwell, in the then West Riding of Yorkshire and attended Ecclesfield School.[5]

Career

Prior to 1952, Clegg worked as a laboratory technician under Hans Adolf Krebs at Sheffield University's biochemistry department. From 1952 to 1955 he was a Junior Assistant in Natural History at the Sheffield City Museum, which he left between 1955 and 1959 to work at the Woodend Museum in Scarborough as the Assistant Curator before returning to the museum at Sheffield as Natural History Assistant in October 1959. From June 1963 until November 1966, Clegg was the Keeper of Natural Sciences at Doncaster Museum and Art Gallery before, in December 1966 moving to become the Curator of the Bagshaw Museum. He remained in this post until autumn of 1968 when he took up the position of Deputy Director of Dundee Museum, a post in which he remained for six years. In November 1974 he returned to Yorkshire as the Keeper of the Yorkshire Museum which was to be his final curatorship.

From 1982 Clegg was a freelance presenter. He presented 'Country Calendar', 'Strictly for the Birds' and 'Clegg's People' for Yorkshire Television, the latter of which ran for ten series as well as a number of programmes for the BBC. He also enjoyed an active radio career, contributing to various local and national natural history programmes and was the resident 'professional naturalist' on the BBC Radio 4 programme 'The Conch Quiz'. He wrote columns for the Dundee Courier and the Yorkshire Evening Post.

He was an extra mural lecturer for various universities, including Hull, where he was made an honorary fellow in the Department of Adult Education. He was actively involved with many natural history groups, his various positions included president of the Yorkshire Wildlife Trust and of the Yorkshire Naturalists' Union, along with vice presidencies of the Leeds Urban Wildlife Group, York Ornithologist's Club and Rossington Natural History Society.

Clegg was a fellow of the Museums Association and was awarded an honorary Doctor of Science degree by the University of Hull in 1993.

Legacy

In 2004, a newly created hay meadow nature reserve at Broomhill Flash (near Wombwell, South Yorkshire) was named 'Clegg's Meadow' in recognition of Michael's work campaigning for the protection of wildlife sites in the area.[6]

An annual 'Michael Clegg Memorial Birdrace' is held on the first Sunday of each year in which teams from Yorkshire's popular bird-watching areas compete to find and identify as many species of birds in a single day, with proceeds of the event going to charity.[7] [8]

Selected publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Michael Clegg: The man who loved mice. Wainwright, Martin. The Guardian. 3 August 1995. 11.
  2. Web site: Papers of T Michael Clegg . 29 October 2018.
  3. News: Broadcasting - TV and Radio 1995 . The Obituary Page . 19 October 1998 . 29 October 2018.
  4. Book: The History of the Yorkshire Museum and its Geological Collections . . 1988 . North Yorkshire County Council . 136.
  5. Michael Clegg DSc (hon)., FMA, MBOU (1933-1995): a biography and bibliography . The Naturalist. Journal of Natural History of the North of England . Moore, P. G. . 2015 . 140.
  6. News: Yorkshire naturalist remembered in creation of new haven for wildlife . 22 November 2004 . Yorkshire Post . 29 October 2018.
  7. Web site: Michael Clegg Memorial Birdrace Sunday 8th January 2017 . York Orthnithological Club . 29 October 2018.
  8. Web site: Michael Clegg Memorial Bird Race 2015 . Filey Bird Observatory and Group . 29 October 2018.