420 
A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF 
[MOSLEY 
Mosley (Sir Oswald, Bart.), 1785-1871 
Sir Oswald Mosley, D.C.L. Oxon., second baronet of the 
third creation, was born March 27, 1785. He was M.P. for 
Portarlington and N. Staffs, and died May 24, 1871. In 
the undermentioned work he wrote the general natural 
history and the Appendix, Edwin Brown being responsible 
for the annotated lists forming the Fauna and Flora and 
Mineralogy (pp. 83-382). 
1846. Occurrences of the Great Ash-coloured Shrike and Snow Bunting 
near Burton-on-Trent. ( Zoologist , pp. 1209-10.) 
1863. The Natural History of Tutbury, together with the Fauna and Flora 
of the District surrounding Tutbury and Burton-on-Trent, by 
E. Brown, with an Appendix. London (Van Voorst) : 1863. 
Collation — 1 vol. roy. 8vo, pp. xv + pp. 408, with 6 col. and 
3 plain pi. 
Birds by Mosley at pp. 33-58, and Red-eyed Flycatcher (with 
col. pi.) at pp. 385-8. 
List of Birds by Brown at pp. 91-111, with addenda at pp. 
227-8. 
1869. Effect of Cold on Birds. (Zoologist, pp. 1845-6.) 
Mosley (Seth Lister), nat. 1848 
Mr. Mosley, founder of the Economic Museum of Hudders- 
field, is a self-made man, who has devoted his life to the study 
and collection of objects relating to the economic side of 
natural history. In addition to forming his own museum, 
since taken over by the local authorities, he supplied cases 
illustrative of the life histories of injurious insects, etc., to 
many public museums. He is a Fellow of the Entomological 
Society of London, and was at one time lecturer on natural 
history in the Huddersfield Board School. His History of 
British Birds was intended to form 5 vols., but only vols. 
i. and ii. and part of vol. iii. appeared. Vol. iv. was to 
contain “Indigenous Water-birds,” and vol. v. “Accidental 
Visitors.” 
[1881]— 92. A History of British Birds, their Nests, and Eggs, with 
hand-coloured figures of all the species and varieties. With text 
revised by a Fellow of the Zoological Society. Vol. I. [II.] In- 
