The British Museum Has Employed Cats To Work As Mousers Since At Least The Nineteenth Century, Earning Pay, Food, Lodging, And Even Healthcare For Their Services

Santi Rodríguez - stock.adobe.com - illustrative purposes only
Santi Rodríguez - stock.adobe.com - illustrative purposes only

Since 1759, the British Museum has been open to the public. At some point during its 265 years, a colony of cats took over and eventually ended up being employed by the museum, thanks to some human staff members.

According to The New York Times, cats have officially worked as mousers at the British Museum since at least the 19th century.

At the museum, a letter that dates to 1868 stated that each cat was paid 1.5 pence per day for keeping mice out. They also received healthcare, lodging, and food. But how did cats come to be on the museum’s payroll?

Cats weren’t always valued members of the staff. After World War Two, dozens of stray cats infiltrated the museum, causing a nuisance for years.

Following the war, many pet cats became homeless and roamed the streets in groups in order to survive. By 1960, an entire gang of them had sought refuge in the British Museum.

They were mean, smelly, dirty, and disease-ridden. They attacked employees and birthed kittens in various places. For 15 years, the museum struggled to manage its cat infestation, but when the population climbed to 100, the British government decided that extermination would be the only effective solution.

However, some of the museum’s staff members had another strategy in mind. They suggested capturing the cats to have them spayed and deloused. Then, the felines could be placed in new homes. Once the plan was put into action, the number of cats in the museum shrunk to six in just a few months.

In the late 1970s, a cleaner at the British Museum named Rex Shepherd created the Cat Welfare Society, which other staff members joined. The group was dedicated to making sure that cats in the museum were treated humanely.

They provided the museum cats with feeding areas, visits to the veterinarian, and a shelter that was separate from the museum’s artifacts. They even got the cats on a payroll funded by donations.

Santi Rodríguez – stock.adobe.com – illustrative purposes only

For the next decade, the Society kept the cats healthy and at a manageable population size. The cats living in the museum at the time were Suzie, who liked to catch pigeons in mid-air; Pippin and Poppet, who could roll over on command; and Wilson, who was named after the museum’s director, Sir David Wilson.

By 1985, the number of cats had reached zero. Now, the only remaining evidence of the feline employees at the British Museum are newspaper clippings and an old sign warning visitors not to feed the cats outside certain areas. Even though cats no longer occupy the British Museum, the memories of them will live on.

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Emily  Chan is a writer who covers lifestyle and news content. She graduated from Michigan State University with a ... More about Emily Chan

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