ogilvie-grant] BRITISH ORNITHOLOGY 
451 
In 1839 he was Curate of Fulham. He was the son of the 
Rev. Henry North (ob. 1838), Assistant Minister of Welbeck 
Chapel. He is included here on account of the bird section 
in the undermentioned work. He wrote nothing else relating 
to natural history, his other published works being theo- 
logical. 
1850. A Week in the Isles of Scilly. Penzance*: 1850. 
Collation — 1 vol. 8vo, pp. ix + pp. 199, with 4 pi. 
Birds at pp. 147-60. 
Northumberland (Henry Algernon Percy, Fifth 
Earl of) 
Thp undernoted was first printed in 1770 under the 
editorship of Bishop Thomas Percy, and afterwards in 1827 
by William Pickering. [Not seen.] 
1905. The Regulations and Establishment of the Household of . . . begun 
. . . mdxii. New Edition . . . London : 1905. 
Collation — 1 vol. 8vo, pp. xxvi + pp. 452. 
Note. — pp. 103-7 deal with birds and are of considerable 
interest. 
Ogilvie-Grant (William Robert), nat. 1863 
Mr. Ogilvie-Grant, who became Assistant Keeper of the 
Zoological Department, British Museum (Natural History) 
in 1913, was born March 25, 1863, being the second son of 
the Hon. George H. E. Ogilvie-Grant and Eleanora, fourth 
daughter of the late Sir William Gordon- Gumming, Bart. 
He was educated at Cargilfield and Fettes College, Edinburgh, 
and studied zoology and anatomy. In 1882 he became 
an Assistant (2nd class) in the Zoological Department of 
the old British Museum, which was transferred to the New 
Natural History Museum the following year. He studied 
ichthyology under Dr. Gunther, and in 1885 he was placed 
in charge of the Ornithological Section during Dr. Sharpe’s 
absence in India, and afterwards remained in that Depart- 
ment, becoming Assistant (1st class) in 1893. He has made 
many collecting trips, especially to Sokotra and the Madeira 
