The Captain’s Menageries: Ronald Cheyne-Stout and the Central Park and Prospect Park Zoos

Captain Cheyne-Stout with his favorite zoo animal, Spiny, whom he kept as a pet in his officeDuring the Great Depression, New York City Parks Commissioner Robert Moses embarked upon a wide-ranging overhaul of the NYC parks system that included the reconstruction of the Central Park Zoo  and the construction of the Prospect Park Zoo.   (Links lead to New York City Parks Department history pages.)  Robert Moses first hired Captain Ronald Cheyne-Stout as an animal consultant for the two zoos, and later took him on as the zoos’ Menagerie Director.  Cheyne-Stout served as Director from 1934 until 1939, when Moses fired him.  The circumstances of the dismissal were disputed, as Moses claimed negligence while Cheyne-Stout claimed that he was fired because he was about to file for a pension (he suffered lingering health issues following a 1936 lion attack).  Cheyne-Stout sued the City, and after a lengthy appeals process, was finally reinstated in 1941, at which point he retired and applied for his delayed pension.

(The New York Times often covered Cheyne-Stout’s accomplishments and misadventures; although the articles themselves are behind a paywall, their headlines and abstracts provide an illuminating glimpse of his extraordinary tenure, as well as a sense of how far zoo husbandry has come since the 1930s.)

Among the treasures in the WCS Archives is a scrapbook compiled by Cheyne-Stout that documents the zoos’ construction, facilities, and animals, as well as various celebrity friends and guests.  The scrapbook, part of the Archives’ collection of records relating to the so-called ‘City Zoos,’ gives a sense of the zoos’ operations a half-century before their administration was transferred from the City of New York to the New York Zoological Society in the 1980s.   We have extremely little material on the City Zoos from before the transfer, so Cheyne-Stout’s record of his time is a highlight of our collections.  Below are a few images from the scrapbook, which came to the WCS Archives in 2005 as the gift of an anonymous donor.

Central Park Zoo reconstruction and reopening

Stonemasons at work at the Central Park Zoo

Stonemasons at work at the Central Park Zoo

Cover of the invitation to Central Park Zoo's 1934 reopening celebration

Cover of the invitation to Central Park Zoo’s 1934 reopening celebration

Mayor Fiorello La Guardia, his family, New York State Governor Alfred E. Smith, and their entourages were just a few of the faces in the crowd at the December 1934 Central Park Zoo reopening

Mayor Fiorello La Guardia, his family, New York State Governor Alfred E. Smith, and their entourages were just a few of the faces in the crowd at the December 1934 Central Park Zoo reopening

Prospect Park Zoo keepers and exhibits

Prospect Park Head Keeper John O'Brien (in glasses) with elephant and other zoo keepers

Prospect Park Head Keeper John O’Brien (in glasses) with elephant and other zoo keepers

Cheyne-Stout with 'Jack O'Brien,' a young bear born in Prospect Park Zoo and named after the zoo's head keeper

Cheyne-Stout with ‘Jack O’Brien,’ a young bear born in Prospect Park Zoo and named after the zoo’s head keeper

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Concept illustration for Prospect Park Zoo's original bear den exhibit

Concept illustration for Prospect Park Zoo’s original bear den exhibit

Celebrities and other zoo personalities

 

Heavyweight boxer Max Baer posing for the cameras with lion cubs

Heavyweight boxer Max Baer posing for the cameras with lion cubs [Update: a reader of this blog has pointed out to us that this photo shows Primo Carnera, not Max Baer, and that it has been incorrectly labeled]

Captain Cheyne-Stout with his favorite zoo animal, Spiny, whom he kept as a pet in his office

Captain Cheyne-Stout with his favorite zoo animal, a hedgehog named Spiny, whom he kept as a pet in his office and apparently mistook for a porcupine.

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3 thoughts on “The Captain’s Menageries: Ronald Cheyne-Stout and the Central Park and Prospect Park Zoos

  1. Don Majeski

    The name of the boxer holding the lion cubs is mislabeled as former heavyweight champion Max Baer it is, in fact ,another one time heavyweight boxing champion PRIMO CARNERA

    Reply
  2. Edward von Koenigseck

    Saw an article in the NY Daily News dated 29 July 1936. Mr. Stout was attacked by a lioness (Curly) to which invited guests Carl V. Koenigseck (a German authority on lions) and Frank Buck were witnesses. Thankfully Mr. Stout survived the attack. The Daily Iowan reported the same incident, in which Count Karl V. Koenigseck was again referenced. Details of the lion encounter were slightly altered from the Daily News version. Based on the events described by two different reporters, Mr. koenigseck apparently had two different backgrounds. If anyone has information on Carl V. Koenigseck (Authority on lions and Director of the Berlin Zoo) please contact Edward von Koenigseck at edvonk@aol.com. The referenced Mr. Koenigseck was my father.

    Reply

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