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For over
forty years a towering force in the field of Natural Science in Victoria,
McCoy was born Roman Catholic in Dublin the second son of Simon McCoy a
qualified physician and professor at Queen’s College, Galway; his date of
birth has been a source of dispute amongst historians. McCoy’s path to
greatness was unconventional as it was extraordinary. A renowned geologist,
palaeontologist and museum director in Great Britain before his arrival in
Australia on Boxing Day 1854 as one of the original four professors of the
newly founded University of Melbourne (1854-99), McCoy was an intellectual
aristocrat; set in his ways and inflexible in his thinking to adapt to
Australian conditions he was everything the selection committee wanted - “of
such habits and manners as to stamp on their future pupils the character of
the loyal, well-bred English gentleman”. Neither a politician, reformer or
advanced thinker, McCoy was essentially a scholar and museum director: his
teaching methods were theoretical and practical field work was shunned much
to the ire of the students which led to the establishment of chairs in
Chemistry (1882) and Biology (1887); as a member of the Victorian Zoological
Society, in 1862 he urged the introduction of exotic species including the
English song-bird and the rabbit as a reminder of “the varied touching,
joyous strains of those delightful reminders of our early home”; as chairman
of the royal commission on the colony’s mineral resources (1856) he was
ignorant to the potential of deep gold reefs believing it to be
theoretically impossible and disagreed with the commission’s secretary
Jacob Braché (German Cemetery, Northcote); an anti-Darwinist, he argued
there was no geological proof of the Genesis phases of creation; and
finally, in a protracted and bitter controversy that lasted for over thirty
years he fought a losing battle with Rev. William Clarke (North Sydney
Cemetery) over Palaeontological theories on the age of Australian coal.
Described as “strongly built, of medium height, ruddy of countenance with
waved reddish hair, side whiskers and a determined chin”, McCoy’s
contribution to the advancement of natural science lies in the National
Museum of Victoria which in the last decade of his life was recognised
internationally as one of the world's great national history museums. With
a dogged determination, considerable tenacity and a cavalier disregard of
financial procedures, McCoy fought to keep the collection at the university
under his control, and at the time of his death the collection amounted to
some 510,000 specimens valued at £40,000; a naturalist who stayed indoors,
the Museum was used solely for scientific research and education. Idle
museum shows were ignored. Residing at Maritima - South Road, Brighton
Beach, McCoy died on 13 May 1899 and was buried with Church of England
rites; in January 1891 he became the first professor of an Australian
university to be knighted.
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.jpg)
(above) Sir Frederick
McCoy
(Reproduced with kind permission of
Royal Society of
Victoria,P000589)

(above) Monumental
Headstone (enlarge
image) |
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Source:
ADB Volume 5 1851-90 (K-Q).
The Argus 15 May 1899.
The Age 15 May 1899.
Pescott, E., “Collections of a century. The
history of the first hundred years of the National Museum of Victoria”
(1954).
Sutherland, A., “Victoria and its Metropolis”
(1888).
“The Victorian Historical Journal” (June
1998).
“The University of Melbourne 150th
Anniversary” -
(http://www.unimelb.edu.au/150/150people/mccoy.html). |
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