The zoo had its roots in a private menagerie established by
Governor General of India,
Richard Wellesley, established around 1800 in his summer home at
Barrackpore near Kolkata, as part of the
Indian Natural History Project. The first superintendent of the menagerie was the famous Scottish physician
zoologist Francis Buchanan-Hamilton. Buchanan-Hamilton returned to England with Wellesley in 1805 following the Governor-General's recall by the Court of Directors in London. The collection from this era are documented by
watercolours by Charles D'Oyly, and a visit by the famous French
botanist Victor Jacquemont.
Sir Stamford Raffles visited the menagerie in 1810, encountering his first
tapir there, and doubtless used some aspects of the menagerie as an inspiration for the
London Zoo. The foundation of zoos in major cities around the world caused a growing thought among the British community in Kolkata that the menagerie should be upgraded to a formal zoological garden. Credence to such arguments was lent by an article in the now-defunct
Calcutta Journal of Natural History July 1841 issue. In 1873, the Lieutenant-Governor
Sir Richard Temple formally proposed the formation of a zoo in Kolkata, and the Government finally allotted land for the zoo based on to the joint petition of the
Asiatic Society and
Agri-Horticultural Society. The zoo was formally opened in
Alipore - a posh Kolkata suburb, and inaugurated on 1 January 1876 by
Edward VII, then
Prince of Wales. (Some reports place the inauguration on an alternate date of 27 December 1875). It grew based on gifts from British and Indian nobility - like Raja Suryakanta Acharya of
Mymensingh in whose honour the open air tiger enclosure is named the
Mymensingh Enclosure. Other contributors who donated part or all of their private menagerie to the Alipore Zoo included the
Maharaja of Mysore Krishna Raja Wadiyar IV. The park was initially run by an honorary managing committee which included Schwendler and the famous botanist
George King. The first Indian superintendent of the zoo was
Ram Brahma Sanyal, who did much to improve the standing of the Alipore Zoo and achieved good
captive breeding success in an era when such initiatives were rarely heard of.
Cincinnati Zoo finally recorded a live birth in 2001. Alipore Zoo was a pioneer among zoos in the 19th century and the early part of the 20th century under Sanyal, who published the first handbook on captive animal keeping. The zoo had an unusually high scientific standard for its time, and the record of the parasite genus
Cladotaenia (Cohn, 1901) is based upon
cestodes (flatworms) found in an Australian bird that died at the zoo.
Kalākaua, the last king of Hawaii, visited the zoo on 28 May 1881 during
his world tour. ==Controversy ==