Now that the wind is firmly back in the west, it wasn’t really that much of a surprise to hear the news that there was a Blackburnian Warbler on St Kilda at the weekend. I have a bit of a connection with Blackburnian Warbler, no I didn’t see the one on Fair Isle in ‘88 (I was at Portland successfully twitching a Parula at the time) and I wasn’t even born in 1961 when the one was on Skomer, in fact, the only Blackburnians I’ve seen have been in the States. So, what’s the connection ? Jump back to when I started Birding in 1977, the first place I can remember doing regular was Orford Park in my home town of Warrington in Cheshire, turns out that this is the former site of a stately home, Orford Hall, which was demolished in the 1930’s and was the former home of the Blackburne Family. John Blackburne was a wealthy salt merchant and the father of two children - Anna and Ashton, and had studied natural history. Inspired by her father, Anna also studied natural history, in particular Insects (with Peter Pallas) and Birds (with her brother Ashton), Ashton moved to America and sent many bird skins from New York and Conneticut back to Anna at Orford Hall, one of these skins was of a bird never described before - Blackburnian Warbler - named in Anna’s honour by Thomas Pennant. Moving on, in 1979, I started high school and at dinner time a lot of the pupils would get pasties from the ‘out-sales’ of the nearby pub - the Blackburne Arms, this was the former stables of Orford Hall and is still there today. So, in conclusion, Blackburnian Warbler was named from a specimen in Warrington, and after the owner of the park where I started Birding - it’s all connected……
The Blackburne coat of arms in Bridge Street, Warrington.
The Blackburne Arms - seller of fine pasties in the early '80s.
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