George Hudleston Hurlstone Hardy

George Hudleston Hurlstone Hardy (14 August 1883 – 9 January 1966) was an entomologist who specialized in the biology of Diptera, especially Asilidae, Muscidae, Calliphoridae and Sarcophagidae.[1]

George Hudleston Hurlstone Hardy
George Hudleston Hurlstone Hardy, circa 1915
BornAugust 14, 1883
Died9 January 1966(1966-01-09) (aged 83)
Austinmer, New South Wales, Australia
Known forCollecting Australian flies
Spouse(s)Martha Elizabeth Olive Harris
ChildrenMargaret Hurlstone Hardy Fallding
Scientific career
Fieldsentomology
InstitutionsTasmanian Museum and Art Gallery, University of Queensland

He was the eldest son of Matilda Margaret Hudleston and English engineer and amateur entomologist Major George Hurlstone Hardy, who wrote The Book of the Fly.[2] Hardy grew up in the Old House on Park Road in Twickenham and his second cousin was composer William Yeates Hurlstone. Hardy studied engineering at the Northumberland Institute and abandoned his Roman Catholic faith after reading Darwin's On the Origin of Species.

After migrating to Australia in 1911, Hardy became assistant curator of the Tasmanian Museum,[3] then a fellow in economic entomology at the University of Queensland.[4] His collection, including his types, is shared between the Tasmanian Museum and the Australian Museum. Other collections are in the CSIRO Division of Economic Entomology and the University of Queensland Insect Collection. Hardy collected Diptera of the principle families throughout Australia, including Tasmania.[5] He published notes on Diptera and descriptions of new species in Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania, Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales, The Australian Journal of Zoology, Records of the Australian Museum, Proceedings of the Royal Society of Queensland, Bulletin of Entomological Research, Annals and Magazine of Natural History and the Entomologist's Monthly Magazine. The Bishop Museum has a bibliography[6] and many Hardy papers are online at Biodiversity Heritage Library URL.

Hardy established the Entomological Society of Queensland in 1923 and was among the founding members of the Australian Entomological Society.[7]

He married Tasmanian schoolteacher Martha Elizabeth Olive Harris, who was a nature lover and helped with his work. Hardy named the striking Tasmanian fly Pelecorhynchus olivei[8] in her honour. They had only one child, biologist Margaret Hurlstone Hardy, but sheep geneticist Helen Newton Turner called them her "second mother and father."

References

  1. Anonym, 2010 Encyclopedia of Australian science
  2. Hardy, George Hurlstone (1915). "The Book of the Fly".
  3. Chadwick, CE and Mackerras, IM. "A tribute to G. H. Hardy," Journal of the Entomological Society of Australia (N.S.W.), Vol. 3, 1966: 48-57.
  4. George Hurlstone Hurdlestone Hardy National Library of Australia
  5. Daniels, Greg, 1978. A catalogue of the type specimens of Diptera in the Australian Museum. Records of the Australian Museum 31(11): 411–471. online as pdf
  6. Bishop Museum Bibliography
  7. Fletcher, Murray and Monteith, Geoff (March 2016). "History of the Australian entomological society". Austral Entomology. 55 (2): 121–131. doi:10.1111/aen.12196.
  8. "Pelecorhynchus olivei Hardy, 1933". Atlas of Living Australia.
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