PREVIOUS NEXT NEW SEARCH

The Evolution of the Conservation Movement, 1850-1920


Click here to see the full text of this document.
Click here to view the images of this document using the page image viewer.

Our vanishing wild life; its extermination and preservation, by William T. Hornaday ... with maps and illustrations ...

Hornaday, William Temple, 1854-

CREATED/PUBLISHED
New York, C. Scribner's sons, 1913.

SUMMARY
American Memory note: William Temple Hornaday was the Director of the New York Zoological Society and the nation's leading advocate of wildlife conservation in this era. This unsparing manifesto was written to accompany Hornaday's launching of the Permanent Wildlife Protection Fund; it is thus (in the words of the historian Stephen Fox) both "a campaign tract" and "one of the first books wholly devoted to endangered wild animals" (John Muir and His Legacy: The American Conservation Movement [Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1981], p. 149). It is also a landmark of conservation history which had a profound effect on the thought of Aldo Leopold, among others. The book surveys the history and causes of wildlife destruction in America and elsewhere, and sets forth a lengthy program to ensure the protection of remaining wildlife for the future, often in militant and moralistic terms. The work also throws light on some of the complexities inherent in the conservation movement at this time: for example, Hornaday accepts the classification of certain bird and mammalian predators as "noxious" or "vermin" and appropriate for destruction (pp. 77-81); there is no criticism here of the massive campaign for the extermination of wolves and coyotes being sponsored at the time by the Bureau of Biological Survey. On a more general level, Hornaday's fulminations against Italian immigrants as incorrigible bird-killers suggest a connection between nativism and conservationism, while his excoriations of market hunters set forth a deeply-rooted class bias shared by many leading conservationists.

SUBJECTS
Wildlife conservation--United States.
Game-laws--United States.

MEDIUM
xv, [1], 411 p. incl. front., illus., ports., maps. 23 cm.

CALL NUMBER
SK353 .H6

DIGITAL ID
amrvg vg03

PREVIOUS NEXT NEW SEARCH