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Harold Maxwell Lefroy

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Name
  
Harold Maxwell-Lefroy

Harold Maxwell-Lefroy
Died
  
October 14, 1925, London, United Kingdom

Books
  
Indian insect life, Indian Insect Pests, Indian Insect Pest

Education
  
King's College, Cambridge, Marlborough College

Harold Maxwell-Lefroy (20 January 1877 – 14 October 1925) was an English entomologist. He was a Professor of Entomology at Imperial College London.

Contents

Biography

He was born on 20 January 1877, and attended Marlborough College and King's College, Cambridge graduating in 1895.

He served as assistant master of Seaford College, and later worked as an entomologist in Barbados from 1899. In 1903, Lefroy was appointed entomologist to the Government of India (succeeding Lionel de Niceville, who was the first entomologist, appointed in 1901). Then in 1905 he was involved in the creation of the Imperial Agricultural Research Institute in Pusa, in the Indian state of Bihar, and he was appointed the first Imperial Entomologist.

Lefroy convened a series of meetings on an all-India basis, to bring together all the entomologists of the country. From 1915, five such meetings were held at the Imperial Agricultural Research Institute, and these formed the foundation of entomological knowledge in India. He was succeeded in the position of Imperial Entomologist by T. Bainbrigge Fletcher.

In the early 1920s, Lefroy was asked by Sir Frank Baines, Principal Architect of the Office of Works, to study ways of exterminating death watch beetles that had been found in Westminster Hall, beside England's Houses of Parliament. As a result, he went on to devise various successful formulations for pest control, and in time Lefroy began receiving regular orders from people who had heard about his work. In 1924, Lefroy and his assistant Miss Elizabeth Eades started supplying bottles of woodworm fluid from a small factory in Hatton Garden, which later led to the formation by them of a company called Rentokil Limited (now Rentokil Initial) in 1925.

Lefroy was accidentally killed by poisonous fumes in a laboratory accident in October 1925. It is thought that he was experimenting with Lewisite.

Publications

  • Indian Insect Pests (1906)
  • Maxwell-Lefroy, H. 1909. Indian Insect Life: a Manual of the Insects of the Plains (Tropical India) Thacker and Spink, Calcutta. xii + 786 pp.
  • Maxwell-Lefroy, H. 1910. List of Names Used in India for Common Insects Indian Agricultural Research Institute, Pusa, India. iv + 47 + xii pp.
  • Manual of Entomology 1923
  • Food of Birds in India (1911) C. W. Mason and Maxwell-Lefroy
  • References

    Harold Maxwell-Lefroy Wikipedia