David Sheldrick

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
David Sheldrick
Born(1919-11-23)23 November 1919
David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust

Major David Leslie William Sheldrick,

David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust (DSWT) was created by his widow, Daphne (later Dame Daphne Sheldrick
) in Nairobi.

Early years

David Sheldrick, an only child, came to Kenya as an infant with his parents. His father had served with the British Remounts during World War I, resettled near Nyeri and became a coffee farmer at Mweiga.[1]

World War II

Educated at the

Burma. He was promoted to Major, the youngest officer in the KAR to achieve this rank.[1]

Tsavo

At the age of 28 in 1948, David Sheldrick became the founder Warden of Tsavo, Kenya's largest National Park. He had to deal with the problem of armed poachers, which he was forced to combat by utilizing staff from the Game Department and National Parks.[1] He studied every facet of the elephants' lifestyle on the preserve, collecting data on their food sources, and, along with his wife, Daphne, rescuing and hand-rearing vulnerable elephants, rhinos and antelopes.[1]

Sheldrick helped to develop the Tsavo's infrastructure. There were no roads or buildings when he first arrived. He paved 1,087 kilometres of tourist all-weather roads, 853 miles of administrative roads and 287 kilometres of anti-poaching tracks. He also oversaw the construction of a concrete causeway across the

Galana River.[1]

Legacy

After Sheldrick's untimely death from a heart attack in 1977, aged 57, his widow, Daphne Sheldrick (Dame Daphne Sheldrick), established the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust (now known as the Sheldrick Wildlife Trust) in his memory. Among other activities the trust runs a Nursery for orphaned elephants and other animals in Nairobi National Park.[2]

The 21 meter-high Sheldrick Falls in Shimba Hills National Reserve were named after him.[3][4] Sheldrick's reed frog (Hyperolius sheldricki) is named in his honour.[5]

External links

References

  1. ^ a b c d e DSWT website
  2. ^ DSWT elephant and rhino orphanage, roughguides.com; accessed 27 September 2014.
  3. ^ "Supporting the Mwalunganje and the Shimba Hills Elephants".
  4. ^ "Shimba Hills National Park". Archived from the original on 9 July 2016. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
  5. ^ Duff-MacKay, A.; Schiøtz, Arne (1971). "A new Hyperolius (Amphibia, Anura) from Kenya". Journal of the East Africa Natural History Society and National Museum. 29: 1–3.