The plain truth about conservation, Numbers 1-10, 1928-1936
Scope and Contents
This collection of correspondence, manuscripts, scrapbooks, and printed matter, created between 1888 and 1937, deals primarily with William T. Hornaday's role as a conservationist. Documented in detail are his activities as administrator of the Permanent Wildlife Protection Fund, which he founded in 1913-1914 and directed until his death. Conservation issues discussed in these papers include the passage of the Bayne Law in New York State, the status of the fur seal herds, wildlife censuses, excessive hunting, the importation of wild bird plumage for millinery purposes, and the protection of migratory game and wildlife through bag limits, closed seasons, and sanctuaries.
Other subjects include the planting of shade trees for the streets of Buffalo, New York, 1893-1895; notes on mountain sheep, 1901; and a survey of zoology in schools, 1905-1910. Also present is correspondence concerning real estate in Buffalo and publication of Hornaday's Taxidermy and zoological collecting (Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1911). A short series of miscellaneous writings includes a portion of a photocopy of Hornaday's unpublished autobiography, Eighty fascinating years
.
Dates
- 1928-1936
Access Restrictions
Some scrapbooks in series 4 are too fragile to be physically accessed, although the first ten scrapbooks have been digitized and are available at www.wcs.org/library. Please contact the WCS Archives regarding other possible access restrictions.
Extent
From the Fonds: 8.8 Linear Feet (22 Hollinger boxes)
From the Fonds: 11.2 Cubic Feet (33 oversize flat boxes)
Language of Materials
From the Sub-Series: English
Creator
- From the Fonds: Hornaday, William T., (William Temple), 1854-1937 (Person)
Repository Details
Part of the Wildlife Conservation Society Archives Repository