Career
He was a collector of Asian wildlife, businessman and yachtsman, and founded the Yokohama Yacht Club in Japan. Alan Owston left England for Asia in 1871, working as a merchant in Japan and was also busy as an amateur naturalist. The Owston"s palm civet or Owston"s civet (Chrotogale owstoni) is named after him.
Owston collected or arranged to have collected a wide range of marine specimens, notably fish from Japan and China, a collection once hailed "one of the most important collections of its kind".
Carnegie Museum of Natural History Pittsburgh has a collection of 1,364 of his Asian fishes. Some other animals named after him include the fish Trismegistus owstoni, a clam, a frog, and woodpecker.
His bird collection was also hailed for "the prodigious number of bird specimens". His collections can be found in many museums today, notably the Smithsonian collection of his reptiles, birds and fish.
He is also noted for his deep-sea sponge collection at the Natural History Museum, London which also has a charming Victorian photographic portrait of him from Japan with one of his giant sponges.
He was unusual as an Englishman working in Japan as it opened to western influence and business interests, being buried in the foreigners" cemetery in Yokohama. Alan Owston had an older brother, Captain Francis Owston (born 27 April 1852 Pirbright, Surrey - died 27 January 1927 England, a sea captain working from England and also later a businessman in Japan) and a younger sister, Bertha Owston (24 June 1864 Pirbright, Surrey, England - 1952 Leavenheath, Suffolk, England). Alan was married twice to Japanese women and had several children.
More biographical information is given in the family tree section of the external links.