Edward Grey Institute
In 1938 the BTO contributed funds to the new Edward Grey Institute of Field Ornithology.
In 1947, the institute became part of a new department of Zoological Field Studies at Oxford University, and the BTO again concentrated on a programme of volunteer-based surveys.
Beech Grove
In December 1962 the BTO purchased Beech Grove, a large Victorian House in Tring, Hertfordshire, relocating there from Oxford, along with their Ringing Office, whccih had been at the British Musuem.
Atlases
In September 1967, inspired by on-going work on the innovative Atlas of Breeding Birds of the West Midlands, produced by the West Midland Bird Club, and in partnership with the Irish Wildbird Conservancy (now BirdWatch Ireland), work began on the first Atlas of Breeding Birds in Britain and Ireland. 3,862 10km squares were surveyed The atlas was published in 1976. T
The New Atlas (1993) updated and refined this huge survey, again with the help of IWC and the Scottish Ornithologists Club. A Winter Atlas and a Historical Atlas have also been published and the groundbreaking Migration Atlas is now available.
The Nunnery
The BTO moved to The Nunnery, Thetford, Norfolk, which had been donated to them, in April 1991. Parts of the medieval Benedictine Nunnery of St George can still be seen on this site.
External links
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