Hastings Rarities

The Hastings Rarities affair is a case of putative ornithological fraud. Two articles in the August 1962 issue of the journal British Birds, one a statistical examination by John Nelder, the other an editorial by Max Nicholson and James Ferguson-Lees, made a case for several records of birds collected within a 20 mile (32 km) radius of Hastings, in Kent and Sussex, south-east England, between 1892 and 1930, to be treated with suspicion. Consequently 29 bird species or subspecies were dropped from the British List (though most of these have subsequent acceptable records from elsewhere in Britain) and 550 records, relating to 80-90 species, were rejected. Although some of these rejected records were undoubtedly good ones, there was no easy way of distinguishing them.

Although doubts had been expressed privately for many years about the provenance of many specimens from the Hastings area, until the articles appeared there had been no systematic investigation of the records. The case made in British Birds was essentially statistical, concerning the unlikelihood of so many records of rare or new species being made within a limited area and limited time period when compared with a similar area and with earlier and later time periods. However, most records recommended for rejection were of specimens that had passed through the hands of George Bristow (1863-1947), a taxidermist and gunsmith of St Leonards-on-Sea in the borough of Hastings.

It was clear that Bristow was suspected of having been the perpetrator of a series of frauds, carried out from the 1890s over at least the first two, and possibly three, decades of the 20th century, through importing bird specimens from outside the British Isles, and selling them to wealthy ornithologists, such as Walter Rothschild, as having been procured from the Hastings area. John Nelder later estimated that Bristow had made about £7000, a considerable amount of money at the time, from this scheme.

The deletion of several taxa from the List had considerable repercussions. As the suspect records covered nearly four decades, many had been incorporated into books about birds in Britain, including major ornithological reference works, and there was resistance from some ornithologists to accepting the deletions. David Bannerman, in the late stages of completing his monumental The Birds of the British Isles (12 vols, 1933-63), decided to maintain his faith in the validity of the controversial Hastings records and ignore the decision to delete them from the List. Since then, most of the species dropped have been readmitted to the List on the basis of good subsequent records.

Read more about Hastings Rarities:  Bird Species Dropped From The British List in 1962

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