William Willoughby Cole Verner
External Nest - Griffon Vulture (from 1909 book)
BornOctober 22, 1852
DiedJanuary 25, 1922
NationalityBritish
Occupationsoldier
EmployerBritish Army
Known forAuthor, Ornithologist, Cave discoverer

Colonel William Willoughby Cole Verner (October 22, 1852 – January 25, 1922) was a British soldier, writer and ornithologist and inventor of cavalry sketching board and a type of compass. He was briefly a Professor of Topology at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. He is remembered for bringing, Cueva de la Pileta, a cave filled with cave paintings to international attention.[1]

Life

Verner was born in 1852 and he showed an early interest in bones owning the fossils of extinct animals.[1] By 1867 he had started his own diary recording his interest in egg collecting and shooting. In 1874 he joined the Rifle Brigade and was posted to Gibraltar although he aso holidayed on the Scottish island of Tiree with fellow naturalist Howard Irby where they continued their interest in studying, shooting (and eating) the local wildlife. He continued his diary until 1890.[2]

In 1895 Verner had a novel version of compass named after him. The compass was manufactured by two different companies and version nine of the design was still being made in 1942.[3]

Verner became the official historian of the Rifle Brigide and he edited the letters home of a major to create A British Rifle Man: The Journals and Correspondence of Major George Simmons, Rifle Brigade, during the Peninsular War & Campaign of Waterloo.[4] He also wrote The Military Life of H. R. H. George: Duke of Cambridge based on Prince George who had spent a disastrous year as Governor of Gibraltar.

He wrote Sketches in the Soudan (sic) in 1885 and Rapid Field-Sketching and Reconnaissance and Advanced Guard and Outpost Duties for Riflemen in 1889. The First British Rifle Corps. He wrote An historical account of the Rifle Brigade and of the King's Royal Rifle Corps in 1890 and Some Notes on Military Topography in 1891 and Map Reading and the Elements of Field Sketching in 1893 and after he retired to Algeciras he wrote My Life among the Wild Birds in Spain. With illustrations in 1909[5]

In 1911, Verner discovered Cueva de la Pileta and with Abbe Breuil also discovered Devil's Tower Cave in Gibraltar.[6] Breil had come to Spain because of Verner's reporting of Cueva de la Pileta near Ronda. Verner had been told of the cave that had been discovered by a Spanish farmer called José Bullón in 1905 who was looking for bat guarno. Bullón had found human remains and markings on the walls, but assumed that they were made by the Moors. Verner had himself lowered into the cave and later reported his findings in the Saturday Review.[7] Verner write a number of weekly reports for the review which factually described the cave, although Verner accounted for the drawings of extinct animals by assuming that they had been sketched a result of observing the fossil bones that were there. It was these reports that brought Breuil to Spain with Hugo Obermaier, Paul Wernert and the Spaniard Juan Cabre Aquilo. Breuil stayed in Spain for two months studying the cave paintings whilst funded by the Prince of Monaco.[1] Verner later co-authored a scientific paper with Breuil and Obermaier on Cueva de la Pileta.

Verner wrote History and Campaigns of the Rifle Brigade in 1912.[5] In 1917 Breuil returned and he and Verner were warned off their next investigation of Devil's Tower Cave in Gibraltar by a local policeman (but not before they had retrieved some Neanderthal tools). Their final visit to the cave was in 1919 and they were convinced that this was another home to early man like the earlier finds at Cuerva de la Pieta and at Forbes' Quarry Cave, Gibraltar 1 had been found over fifty years earlier. Their confidence was confirmed when Gibraltar 2 was found nearby in the early 1920s[8] by Dorothy Garrod who had come to Gibraltar at Breuil's encouragement.

References

  1. ^ a b c Lawson, Andrew J. (2012). Painted Caves: Palaeolithic Rock Art in Western Europe. Oxford University Press. p. 382-6. Retrieved 21 January 2013. ((cite book)): More than one of |pages= and |page= specified (help)
  2. ^ "The Natural History Diaries of Willoughby Verner". Waltersgill. Retrieved 14 January 2013.
  3. ^ Verners Pattern Prismatic Compasses, compasscollector.com, accessed January 2013
  4. ^ A British Rifle Man: The Journals and Correspondence of Major George Simmons, Rifle Brigade, during the Peninsular War & Campaign of Waterloo, Major George Simmons, Book Depository, accessed January 2013
  5. ^ a b William Willoughby Cole Verner, Amazon.co.uk, accessed January 2013
  6. ^ Cite error: The named reference devils cave was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  7. ^ Cuerva de la Pieta, accessed 20 January 2013
  8. ^ Garrod, D. A. E., Buxton, L. H. D., Elliot-Smith, G., Bate, D.M. A. (1928). "Excavation of a Mousterian rock-shelter at Devil's Tower, Gibraltar". Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 58: 33–113. JSTOR 4619528.((cite journal)): CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)


Category:1852 births Category:1922 deaths Category:Soldiers Category:Ornithologists