Frank was the first son of Canon
William Buckland, a noted geologist and
palaeontologist, and
Mary, a fossil collector, palaeontologist and illustrator. Frank was born and brought up in
Oxford, where his father was a Canon of
Christ Church. His godfather was the sculptor Sir
Francis Chantrey. Educated at home by his mother, he went, at eight and a half, to a boarding school in
Cotterstock, Northamptonshire staying with his uncle John Buckland. From 1837 to 1839, he went to a preparatory school in
Laleham, Surrey, run by his uncle, John Buckland, a brutal headmaster who flogged his pupils quite excessively. Relief came with a scholarship to
Winchester College, a school with an unbroken history of six hundred years. Here he was taught by the Second Master, Charles Wordsworth, who sent letters of praise to his father. Winchester had a harsh regime, but was much preferable to his previous school. While at Winchester he continued to take an interest in animals, trapping rats and mice, dissecting and sometimes eating them. Students complained of a foul smell emanating from the remains of a cat under his bed. Towards the end of his schooling, he was dissecting human parts that he obtained from the hospital on the sly. He was known for his exploits with a
lancet. One student with a
dolichocephalous head heard Frank muttering "what wouldn't I give for that fellow's skull!" He was not a first-rate scholar, but managed to gain entrance to
Christ Church, Oxford in October 1844, after failing to get a scholarship to the smaller
Corpus Christi. He joined a debating club and the first essay he read was on "whether Rooks are beneficial to the farmer or not". He became a friend of the curator at Surrey Zoo and when he heard that a panther had died, he had it dug up and declared that the meat "was not very good". When the British Association met in 1847 at Oxford, Frank took along his pet bear Tigleth Pileser dressed in student attire of a cap and gown to the party.
Charles Lyell wrote that Buckland introduced the bear formally to him and other zoologists present. This was not to go on for long as the Dean finally informed him that "either you or your bear must go". In 1845 Frank went to Giessen for three months to study chemistry under
Justus von Liebig. In September 1846 he made a trip around Switzerland. Frank also attended some of the lectures of his father. Buckland studied at Christ Church from 1844 to 1848,
graduating at the second attempt. Passing out in May 1848 and at the advice of
Richard Owen and
Sir Benjamin Brodie, his father sent him to study surgery in London at
St George's Hospital under
Caesar Hawkins. He attended classes by
Henry Gray where another classmate was
Francis Day. A visit to Paris in 1849 gave him a chance of comparing their methods with those in London. In London most of the nurses were illiterate; one who claimed to read was tested with a label reading "This lotion to be applied externally only". The nurse interpreted it as "Two spoonfuls to be taken four times a day". Buckland was made a
MRCS in 1851. He was appointed Assistant Surgeon (= house-surgeon) at St George's, 1852. A vivid word-portrait was written by a surgical colleague, Charles Lloyd: He left St. George's in 1853 and in August 1854 he joined as an assistant surgeon in the 2nd
Life Guards. This appointment that left him plenty of time for his growing interest in natural history, since the
Household Cavalry were not deployed abroad from the
Battle of Waterloo (1815) until the
Battle of Tel el-Kebir in 1882. Buckland held the appointment until 1863. During this period he published numerous notes in
The Field, began giving talks and writing books. Frank was elected to the
Athenaeum Club in February 1854, and later that year was gazetted as Assistant Surgeon to the Second
Life Guards. In January and February 1859, Buckland made a search for the coffin of
John Hunter in the vaults of
St Martin-in-the-Fields. Buckland called Hunter the "greatest of Englishmen" and on 22 February he discovered the coffin after withstanding the noxious air in the vault. The Leeds School of Medicine gave him a medal for this discovery. Buckland married Hannah Papps on 11 August 1863, who was an "excellent nurse" and caretaker for their assorted pets. Buckland's early death was presaged by lung
haemorrhages in 1879 after working in the winter. In 1880 he had severe oedema. The excess fluid was drained using a novel treatment of the time, a cannula called Southey's tube developed by the surgeon Dr
Henry Herbert Southey whose brother, the poet
Robert Southey, was a friend of Buckland. He also had asthma and bronchitis from a history of heavy cigar smoking. His brother-in-law
George C. Bompas was present at the time of his death. The death certificate records the cause as hepatic disease and bronchitis although the cause may have been pulmonary tuberculosis. He was buried in
Brompton Cemetery, London. Buckland was a pioneer of zoöphagy: his favourite research was eating the animal kingdom. This habit he learnt from his father, whose residence, the Deanery, offered such rare delights as mice in batter, squirrel pie, horse's tongue and ostrich. After the
"Eland Dinner" in 1859 at the London Tavern, organised by
Richard Owen, Buckland set up the
Acclimatization Society to further the search for new food. Buckland spoke about the introduction of the turkey, musk-duck and pheasant in the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth century respectively and that it was a pity that the same monotonous food was being eaten in the heyday of Queen Victoria's reign. including, at times, boiled elephant trunk,
rhinoceros pie,
porpoise heads, and stewed
mole. His writing was sometimes slapdash, but always vivid and racy, and made natural history attractive to the mass readership. This is an example: :"On Tuesday evening, at 5pm, Messrs Grove, of
Bond Street, sent word that they had a very fine
sturgeon on their slab. Of course, I went down at once to see it... The fish measured 9 feet in length [nearly three metres]. I wanted to make a cast of the fellow... and they offered me the fish
for the night: he must be back in the shop the next morning by 10 am... [various adventures follow] I was determined to get him into the kitchen somehow; so, tying a rope to his tail, I let him slide down the stone stairs by his own weight. He started all right, but 'getting way' on him, I could hold the rope no more, and away he went sliding headlong down the stairs, like an avalanche down
Mont Blanc... he smashed the door open... and slid right into the kitchen... till at last he brought himself to an anchor under the kitchen table. This sudden and unexpected appearance of the armour-clad sea monster, bursting open the door... instantly created a sensation. The cook screamed, the house-maid fainted, the cat jumped on the dresser, the dog retreated behind the copper and barked, the monkeys went mad with fright, and the sedate parrot has never spoken a word since." An enthusiastic lover of natural history, he became a popular author, writing
Fish Hatching (1863),
Curiosities of Natural History (4 vols. 1857–72),
Log Book of a Fisherman and Zoologist (1876) and
Natural History of British Fishes (1881). When he fell out with
The Fields editor, he founded and edited a rival periodical,
Land and Water, in 1866. But Buckland was no theoretician: his life was lived on the practical side of natural history.
Buckland and fisheries The
Buckland Foundation is a charity endowed from Buckland's estate. It funds a Buckland Professor each year to give public talks in relevant parts of the United Kingdom and Ireland on a matter of current concern in the commercial fisheries. Buckland sat on four Commissions at Fish and Fishing between 1875 and his death in 1880. Something of the flavour of his views is given by the following quotations from his reports and articles: :"A greater cry should more properly be established against those which deter or kill the fish by noxious materials which they pour into public waters for their private use and benefit...". :"What objection can be reasonably argued against the employment of revenue cruisers for the accommodation of naturalists, appointed by government ... in order that they make a thoroughly practical examination of the dark and mysterious habits of food fishes." :"We want also samples of the surface water itself under peculiar conditions, for instance, what is the meaning of the wonderful white appearance of the sea which took place last autumn in nearly all the waters of the northern coast of England? What is the meaning of the occasional red appearance of the sea for many square miles? Again, how are we to devise a mesh of net that shall let go the small soles and undersized fry of other sea fish, and keep marketable fish only?" Buckland founded the Museum of Economic Fish Culture in South Kensington in 1865, the remaining contents of which are held by the
Scottish Fisheries Museum in Anstruther. These include 45 plaster casts and an 1882 marble bust of Buckland by J. Warrington Wood. == Legacy ==