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Volume II. The founding of two national bison herds, bulk: Bulk, 1908, 1906-1911

 File — Flat-box: 40

Scope and Contents

Bison once roamed North America in numbers greater than 20 million. However, by the late nineteenth century, the mass slaughter of bison with the settlement of the American West brought the species to the brink of extinction. In 1889, following upon his work with the US National Museum, William T. Hornaday published a stark portrait of the species’ destruction. Titled The Extermination of the American Bison, Hornaday’s study posited that the American bison population had fallen as low as 1,000.

In 1905, Hornaday and others convened a group of diverse stakeholders at the Bronx Zoo in New York City and formed the American Bison Society (ABS). With President Theodore Roosevelt as its honorary president, ABS set out to prevent the extinction of the American bison by establishing a number of small herds in widely separated parts of the country. The organization’s first success came in 1907 when it sent 15 bison donated by the New York Zoological Society by railway from the Bronx Zoo to Wichita National Forest and Game Preserve in Oklahoma to begin the work of restoring the Western Plains’ depleted bison population. In 1908, following successful petitioning by ABS, Congress passed a bill to establish a permanent national bison range in Montana with one contingency: ABS was required to raise $10,000 to secure a breeding population of bison for the new range.

Volume 2 documents the history of these early events in ABS history, including the Society’s success in raising $10,560.50 for the Montana national herd. Although this is the only scrapbook concerning ABS activities in Hornaday’s Scrapbook Collection on the History of the Wild Life Protection and Extermination, the Wildlife Conservation Society Archives holds many additional historical American Bison Society records.

Dates

  • Majority of material found in Bulk, 1908
  • 1906-1911

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

English

Repository Details

Part of the Wildlife Conservation Society Archives Repository

Contact:
WCS Library/Archives
2300 Southern Blvd
Bronx New York 10460 United States