Edinburghâs long-standing connection with penguins can be traced back to the involvement of the Zoo Societyâs first president, Lord Salvesenâa law lord related to the family behind the Leith-based South Georgia Whaling Company. Today, any link between a conservation zoo and whaling might seem unfathomable, but in the early days, the whalers provided the zoo with rare access to wildlife from the Southern Oceansâamong them a seemingly endless supply of penguins.
The first six penguins arrived in 1914, though they were met with limited enthusiasm by Gillespic, who showed a far greater interest in the elephant seals that accompanied them. However, as more penguins arrived annually, it quickly became clear they thrived in Scotlandâs mild climate. Over the years, the Salvesens brought more than 800 penguins to Edinburghâsome destined for the city zoo and others for institutions across the UK.
At various points, the zoo has housed representatives from nearly every penguin species, including the first Adelie penguins ever seen in Europe, and the first New Zealand âfairyâ blue penguins.
In the 1950s, an event occurred that would become zoo folklore. A keeper inadvertently left a gate open to the penguin pool, and was promptly followed by a procession of penguins wandering through the zoo. It marked the beginning of Edinburghâs now-famous âPenguin Paradeââan event enjoyed daily by summer visitors, and seemingly just as enthusiastically by the penguins themselves, with around two-thirds of the zooâs 120-strong colony typically choosing to take part.