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George Bird Grinnell, a respected authority on the Plains
Indians, passed away on this date in 1938; he was 88 and had led a vigorous
and amazingly productive life.
In 2004, the Bugle published a story by Shane Mahoney, who wrote, He
was many things: scientist, hunter, explorer, naturalist, entrepreneur
and author. Above all else, however, George Bird Grinnell was and remains
the most influential conservationist in North American history. He seldom
took and never sought credit for his achievements, though, and as a result
his reputation is often overshadowed by the more powerful and directed
personalities of Theodore Roosevelt, John Muir and Gifford Pinchot.
Grinnell was born in 1849 in New York, where he had a unique upbringing.
His father was a successful businessman who, among other things, provided
investment banking for the likes of the Vanderbilts and other wealthy
families. But, the defining phase of Georges childhood began when
he was seven years old; his family moved from Brooklyn to Manhattan, where
they lived in Audubon Park, a wilderness estate owned by John James Audubons
widow.
As a child, Grinnell was allowed to play in a barn that Audubon built
to house his collections. George was greatly impressed by the specimens
and oddities Audubon had gathered during his world travels, and he was
able to discuss them with Audubons sons, Victor and John. He was
also invited to attend a small school that Grandma Audubon
ran in her home.
Grinnell took his first trip west after graduating from Yale. As part
of a paleontology expedition, he marveled at the wealth of wildlife he
encountered on his journey. In Nebraska, his train was halted for three
hours by migrating buffalo. He escaped a prairie fire, he saw his first
beaver, and was able to closely observe the hunting and trapping techniques
used by frontiersmen. The experience was so gratifying, Grinnell returned
to the Great Plains again and again to hunt, fish, collect fossils and
visit his wide circle of Native American friends.
In 1874, Grinnell accompanied General Custer from Fort Abraham Lincoln
to the Black Hills. His official role was as a fossil collector, but he
learned the true nature of the expedition when one of Custers prospectors
confirmed the Black Hills had gold. Grinnell soon realized how the gold
strike would devastate his Sioux and Cheyenne friends, and his subsequent
writings on Native American culture earned him the respect of many.
Grinnell was also concerned for the regions wildlife. He became
increasingly alarmed by the senseless slaughter of buffalo and realized
other species were quickly disappearing, too. Many ignored his warnings
that migrating waterfowl were also in grave danger, and he began writing
stories for nature magazines, eventually becoming editor of Field and
Stream. Working with other concerned hunters, Grinnell waged a bold campaign
to conserve wilderness areas and protect wildlife while simultaneously
encouraging sustainable use of wildlife through a common-sense attitude
toward hunting and fishing.
Grinnells idyllic childhood, science education and frontier experiences
provided him a unique understanding of how industry and naturalism could
work together for the common good. Long before Teddy Roosevelt began establishing
national parks, Grinnell was already criticizing destructive deforestation
practices and subsequent loss of wildlife habitat. In fact, Grinnell was
so far-sighted that he predicted many environmental concerns the world
is just now facing.
Source: Shane Mahoney, George Bird Grinnell: The Father of American Conservation,
Bugle, Nov/Dec 2004
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