John Garstang was born in
Blackburn on 5 May 1876, the sixth child of Walter and Matilda Garstang. He was educated at
Blackburn Grammar School and in 1895 he obtained a scholarship for
Jesus College, Oxford to study mathematics. Largely funded by private benefactors, the Institute contained both a library and a museum, intended to support the work of the staff and the teaching of its students. In 2004, this museum was officially renamed the Garstang Museum of Archaeology, to celebrate the centenary of the foundation of the Institute. From 1907–41, Garstang was the first professorship in the methods and practice of archaeology at the university. On behalf of the institute, Garstang excavated sites in Egypt, Sudan and the Near East up to the out break of
World War I. Some of his assistant excavators include
E. Harold Jones, English artist and illustrator. He served as the Director of the
Department of Antiquities in the
British Mandate of Palestine between 1920–26, and excavated at
Ashkelon, 1920–21. He was also the Head of the
British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem, 1919–26. He also carried out a major excavation of
Jericho from 1930–36, funded by Sir Charles Marston. He taught at the Egyptology section of the Faculty of Arts when this was established in the 1920s. One of his students was
Pahor Labib, late Director of the
Coptic Museum, Cairo. From 1936 to the outbreak of
World War II, Garstang excavated Yümük Tepe near
Mersin. ==Personal life==