A Feathered River Across the Sky

Home > Other > A Feathered River Across the Sky > Page 35
A Feathered River Across the Sky Page 35

by Joel Greenberg


  Parmalee, Paul. “Remains of Rare and Extinct Birds from Illinois Indian Sites.” Auk 75 (1958): 169–76.

  ———. “Animal Remains from the Modoc Rock Shelter Site, Randolph County, Illinois.” In Summary Report of Modoc Rock Shelter, 1952, 1953, 1955, 1956. Illinois State Museum Reports of Investigations no. 8. Springfield, 1959.

  Pauly, Philip. Biologists and the Promise of American Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2000.

  Paxson, Henry. “The Last of the Wild Pigeon in Bucks County.” Bucks County Historical Society Collection 4 (1917): 367–82.

  Peterson, Eugene. “The History of Wildlife Conservation in Michigan.” Ph.D. diss. University of Michigan, 1952.

  Phys.Org. “Overfishing Pushes Tuna Stocks to the Brink.” September 8, 2012.

  http://phys.org/news/2012-09-overfishing-tuna-stocks-brink-experts.html

  Potter Journal (Coudersport, PA), April 15, May 13, and June 10, 1880. Clippings in the Coudersport, PA, Historical Society.

  Powell, J. H. Bring Out Your Dead: The Great Plague of Yellow Fever in Philadelphia in 1793. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1993.

  Powers, Grant. Historical Sketches of the Discovery, Settlement, and Progress of Events in the Coos Country and Vicinity. Haverhill, NH, 1880.

  Prairie Farmer (Chicago). “Viciousness of Pigeons.” 12 (February 1852): 83.

  Price, Jennifer. Flight Maps. New York: Basic Books, 2000.

  Purdue, James. “The Father and Daughter of the Oliver S. Biggs Museum of Natural History.” Living Museum 51 (1989): 51–54.

  R. “The Pigeon Trade.” Plattsburgh Republican (NY), August 2, 1851.

  Rader, Walter. Indianapolis Star. March 17, 1934. Reprinted in Wilson, “Historical Notes on DuBois County,” vol. 16: 442.

  Radin, Paul. “The Winnebago Tribe.” Thirty-Seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology. Washington, D.C., 1923.

  Raithel, Christopher. American Burying Beetle (Nicrophorus americanus): Recovery Plan. Newton Corner, MA: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 1991.

  Randolph, Vance. We Always Lie to Strangers: Tall Tales from the Ozarks. New York: Columbia University Press, 1951.

  Raper, Frank. “Pigeons.” Columbus Dispatch, April 9, 1939.

  Ray, Cap. “Early Days in Backwoods.” Lakeland Times (Minocqua, WI), March 9, 1950.

  Reed, J. Michael. “The Role of Behavior in Recent Avian Extinctions and Endangerments.” Conservation Biology 13 (April 1999): 232–41.

  Reeve, Simon. “Going Down in History.” Royal Geographic Society Magazine 73 (March 2001): 60–64.

  Revoil, Benedict Henry. The Pigeons: A Story and a Prophesy. Translated by William Benignus. Altoona: Pennsylvania Alpine Club, 1926.

  Rhoads, Samuel. “The Wild Pigeon … on the Pacific Coast.” Auk 8 (1891): 310–12.

  Roberts, Thomas. The Birds of Minnesota. Vol. 1. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1932.

  Robinson, E. Arthur. “Conservation in Cooper’s The Pioneers.” PMLA 82 (1967): 564–78.

  Roney, Henry. “Among the Pigeons: A Description of the Pigeon Nesting of 1878 and the Work of Protection Undertaken by the East Saginaw and Bay City Game Protection Clubs.” Chicago Field 10 (1879): 345–49.

  Rumer, Tom. Unearthing the Land: The Story of Ohio’s Sciota Marsh. Akron: University of Akron Press, 1999.

  Rupp, William. “Bird Names and Bird Lore Among the Pennsylvania Germans.” Pennsylvania German Society Proceedings and Addresses (Norristown, PA) 52 (1946).

  Sage, John, et al. The Birds of Connecticut. Hartford: State Geological and Natural History Survey of Connecticut, 1913.

  Schaff, Morris. Etna and Kirkersville. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1905.

  Schapper, Ferdinand. “Southern Cook County and History of Blue Island Before the Civil War.” Vol. 1. Typed manuscript, 1917. Chicago Historical Society.

  Scherer, Lloyd, Jr. “The Passenger Pigeon in Northwestern Pennsylvania.” Cardinal 5 (1939): 25–42.

  Schoolcraft, Henry Rowe. Narrative Journal of Travels Through the Northwestern Regions of the United State Performed as a Member of the Expedition Under Governor Cass in the Year 1820. Albany, 1821.

  Schorger, A. W. “The Great Wisconsin Passenger Pigeon Nesting of 1871.” Proceedings of the Linnaean Society of New York 48 (1937): 1–26.

  ———. “Unpublished Manuscripts by Cotton Mather on the Passenger Pigeon.” Auk 55 (1938): 471–77.

  ———. The Passenger Pigeon: Its Natural History and Extinction. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1955.

  Scott, Walter, ed. Silent Wings: A Memorial to the Passenger Pigeon. Madison: Wisconsin Society for Ornithology, 1947.

  Seton, Ernest Thompson. “The Birds of Manitoba.” Proceedings United States National Museum 18 (1891): 522–23.

  Sharkey, Reginald. The Blue Meteor. Petoskey, MI: Little Traverse Historical Society, 1997.

  Shufeldt, R. W. “Anatomical and Other Notes on the Passenger Pigeon … Lately Living in the Cincinnati Zoological Gardens.” Auk 32 (1915): 29–41.

  Sibley, John L. A History of the Town of Union, in the County of Lincoln, Maine. Boston, 1851.

  Simmons, G. F. Birds of the Austin Region. Austin: University of Texas, 1925.

  Smith, George D. “The Tragedy of the Passenger Pigeon.” Unpublished and undated memoir, 1–6. Archives of Eastern Kentucky University, Richmond.

  Smith, Katherine, et al. “Evidence for the Role of Infectious Disease in Species Extinction and Endangerment.” Conservation Biology 20 (2006): 1349–57.

  “Snap Shot.” “Peace and Pigeons in Wisconsin.” Wilkes’ Spirit of the Times 12 (May 27, 1865): 194.

  Snyder, Dorothy. “The Passenger Pigeon in New England.” Old Time New England, no. 3 (1955): 3–14.

  Sork, Victoria, et al. “Ecology of Mast-Fruiting in Three Species of North American Deciduous Oaks.” Ecology 74 (1993): 528–41.

  South Shore Country Club Magazine: Golden Anniversary. “A Day’s Hunting in 1871 on the Club’s Ground.” 42 (August 1956): 34.

  Stanstead. “Spring Notes.” Forest and Stream 40 (1893): 403.

  Steele, Zulma. Angel in Top Hat. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1942.

  St. Joseph Traveler (MI). “Game Hunt.” October 26, 1878.

  Stone, Fanny. Racine and Racine County, Wisconsin. Vol. 1. Chicago: S. J. Clark, 1916.

  Stone, Witmer. Birds of New Jersey. Trenton: J. L. Murphy, 1909.

  Stratton-Porter, Gene. “The Last Passenger Pigeon.” In American Earth, edited by Bill McKibben. New York: Library of America, 2008.

  Swanson, Evadene. “The Use and Conservation of Minnesota Game, 1850–1900.” Ph.D. diss. University of Minnesota, 1940.

  Swarth, Harry S. [HSS]. “Publications Reviewed: Notes on the Passenger Pigeon.” Condor 13 (March–April 1911): 79.

  Thomas, Edward. “Trap Shooting in the Old Days.” Outing 66 (1915): 368–72.

  Thomas, Lately. Delmonico’s: A Century of Splendor. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1967.

  Thompson, Frank. “Incubation Under Difficulties.” Forest and Stream 12 (May 8, 1879): 265.

  ———. “Breeding of the Wild Pigeon in Confinement.” Nuttall Bulletin 6 (1881): 122.

  Thompson, W. W. The Passenger Pigeon. Coudersport, PA, 1921.

  Tober, James. Who Owns the Wildlife? Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1981.

  Todd, W. E. C. Birds of Western Pennsylvania. Pittsburgh, 1940.

  “Tom Tramp.” “A Pigeon Roost.” Rod and Gun 8 (June 3, 1876): 149.

  Townsend, Charles Wendell. “Passenger Pigeon.” In Arthur Cleveland Bent’s Life Histories of North American Gallinaceous Birds. Bulletin of the U.S. National Museum no. 162. Washington, D.C., 1932, 379–402.

  Trautman, Milton. The Birds of Buckeye Lake, Ohio. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1940.

  Traverse, Robert, ed. “The Passenger Pigeon Becomes Extinct.” A Scrapbook History of Early Decatur, Michigan, 1976, 1411.

  Turner, A. B. “The Michig
an Pigeon Question: Mr. Turner’s Reply to Professor Roney.” Chicago Field 10 (February 1, 1879): 401–02.

  Twain, Mark. Autobiography. Vol. 1. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1924.

  United States Fish and Wildlife Service Species Accounts Online.

  http://www.fws.gov/species/species_accounts/bio_swan.html.

  United States Geological Survey, Fort Collins Science Center. “White-Nose Syndrome Threatens the Survival of Hibernating Bats in North America.”

  http://www.fort.usgs.gov/WNS/.

  Upton, William Treat. Anthony Philip Heinrich. New York: AMS Press, 1967.

  Viroqua Censor (Wis). “The Pigeon Roost.” December 1, 1880.

  Ward, Marion. “Four Cross Brothers Are Well Known in Michigan.” Grand Rapids Herald, May 11, 1940. (Lewis Cross file. Archives of Lake Shore Museum Center, Muskegon, MI.)

  Watson, John. Annals of Philadelphia and Pennsylvania. Vol. 2. Philadelphia, 1857.

  Webb, Sara. “Potential Role of Passenger Pigeons and Other Vertebrates in the Rapid Holocene Migrations of Nut Trees.” Quaternary Research 26 (1986): 367–75.

  Webber, C. W. “The Wild Pigeon.” Arthur’s Home Magazine, April 1854, 305–08.

  Welsh, William. “Passenger Pigeons.” Canadian Field-Naturalist 39 (1925): 165–66.

  Wharram, S. V. “The Passenger Pigeon in Ohio.” Bird-Life 39 (August 30, 1943): 65–68.

  Wharton, Richard. “The Extinction of the Passenger Pigeon—an American Tragedy.” Unpublished and undated memoir, a copy of which was conveyed by Wharton (Joaquin, TX) to David Wolf (Nacogdoches, TX), who in December 2001 gave a copy to Stan Casto (Seguin, TX), who gave a copy to me.

  Wheaton, J. M. “Report on the Birds of Ohio.” Report of the Geology of Ohio 4 (1882): 442.

  Whitewater Register (WI), June 3, 1880.

  Whitman, Charles Otis. “Animal Behavior.” Biological Lectures from the Marine Biological Laboratory, Wood’s Hole, Massachusetts. Boston, 1899.

  ———. Posthumous Works of Charles Otis Whitman. Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Foundation, 1919.

  Wicks, J. B. My Bird Parishioners. Paris Hill, NY: 1897.

  Widmann, Otto. A Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri. St. Louis: Academy of Science of St. Louis, 1907.

  Wilcove, David. “In Memory of Martha and Her Kind.” Audubon 91 (1989): 52–55.

  Williams, Charles. “Why Are There So Few Insect Predators of Nuts of the American Beech (Fagus grandifolia)?” Great Lakes Entomologist 40 (2007): 140–53.

  Wilson, Alexander. American Ornithology; or, The Natural History of the Birds of the United States. Boston, 1839.

  Wilson, Etta. “Personal Recollections of the Passenger Pigeon.” Auk 51 (1934): 157–68.

  ———. “Additional Notes on the Passenger Pigeon.” Auk 52 (1935): 412–13.

  ———. “Kin-ne-quay.” Undated source document, 1–4. the Holland Museum Archives and Research Library, Holland, MI.

  Wilson, George. “Historical Notes on DuBois County.” Vols. 14, 16. Jasper, IN: Dubois County Historical Society.

  Winter, William. Shadows of the Stage. 2nd ser. 1894.

  http://www.wayneturney.20m.com/boothjb.htm.

  Wood, J. Claire. “The Last Passenger Pigeons in Wayne County, Michigan.” Auk 27 (1910): 208.

  Wood, Norman. The Birds of Michigan. No. 75. Miscellaneous Publications of the Museum of Zoology of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, 1951.

  Woodruff, Frank. The Birds of the Chicago Area. Bulletin no. 6 of the Natural History Survey. Chicago Academy of Sciences, 1907.

  Wright, Albert Hazen. “Some Early Records of the Passenger Pigeon.” Auk 27 (October 1910): 428–43.

  ———. “Other Early Records of the Passenger Pigeon.” Auk 28 (July 1911): 346–66.

  ———. “Other Early Records of the Passenger Pigeon.” Auk 28 (October 1911): 427–49.

  Young, Duane. “Ecological Considerations in the Extinction of the Passenger Pigeon … Heath Hen … and the Eskimo Curlew.” Ph.D. diss. University of Michigan, 1953.

  Plates Section

  Passenger Pigeons in Flight was painted by Lewis Cross in 1937. Cross was a practitioner of “narrative natural history painting” and is perhaps unique in both drawing the species and knowing the bird in his lifetime. Narrative natural history painting is a term used by Walton Ford to distinguish art that is more expressive than art meant solely to depict a subject through a technically accurate portrait. (From the collection of the Lakeshore Museum Center, Muskegon, Michigan; photograph taken by Fred Reinecke)

  Mark Catesby spent eleven years in the New World sketching and collecting natural history specimens before returning to England in 1726 and publishing The Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama Islands. Volume I contains the earliest known colored drawing of the passenger pigeon. The plate illustrated here is from a later German edition that relies upon Catesby’s image. (From the collection of Garrie Landry and with additional information from Susan Wegner)

  Alexander Wilson’s American Ornithology (1808–1814) featured pictures of 268 species, including this passenger pigeon in volume V. The two warblers that accompany the pigeon are the Blackburnian (called by Wilson the “hemlock warbler”) and the mysterious “blue mountain warbler,” a bird of uncertain identity that has not been encountered since the early nineteenth century. (From the collection of the Morton Arboretum, Lisle, Illinois)

  John James Audubon’s portrait of a male and female passenger pigeon is the best known of any for the species. His classic The Birds of America included 435 hand-colored plates and was released in four volumes between 1827 and 1838. These were accompanied by five volumes of text entitled Ornithological Biography. (From the collection of Garrie Landry)

  Louis Agassiz Fuertes (1874–1927) was one of the country’s premier bird artists of the early twentieth century. He produced a number of passenger pigeon paintings, including this one of an adult male, female, and young that appeared in Forbush’s Birds of Massachusetts and Other New England States (1927). The plate also features two mourning doves, an adult and young. (From the collection of Garrie Landry)

  This painting by John Ruthven, often called the twentieth-century Audubon, depicts a male passenger pigeon at the John Roebling Suspension Bridge. Spanning the Ohio River from Cincinnati, Ohio, to Covington, Kentucky, it was the longest suspension bridge in the world when first opened on December 1, 1866. (Courtesy of John A. Ruthven at www.ruthven.com)

  Mary Ijams holding a stuffed passenger pigeon in 1928 that her father, H. P. Ijams, had recently purchased. The bird had been shot by General Benjamin Cheatham near Nashville in 1856 and is now in the collection of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. (Courtesy of Paul James, Ijams Nature Center, Knoxville, Tennessee)

  Shooting Wild Pigeons in Northern Louisiana is based on a sketch by Smith Bennett and appeared in the Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News of July 3, 1875. Schorger considered this picture to be particularly accurate. (From the collection of Garrie Landry)

  “Educational sliced puzzles” for children were produced principally by two firms, Layman and Curtsies and Selchow and Righter, for the purpose of helping children both spell and learn the names of animals. This particular puzzle of a passenger pigeon was part of a set that featured twelve other birds. (From the collection of Garrie Landry)

  The Travelers Insurance Company ran this picture as part of an advertisement in the September 1936 issue of National Geographic. (The original watercolor is part of the company’s collection, but the artist is unknown.) The ad copy underneath the image was: “A century ago the great naturalist, James [sic] Audubon, observed this species in such abundance that he did not believe its numbers would ever be greatly diminished. Yet the last passenger pigeon vanished twenty years ago. If the fate of an entire species is unpredictable, how much more so are the fortunes of an individual? That is why the wise man, no matter how abundant his fortunes today, prepares for adversities that may befall tomorrow. Moral: Insure in The
Travelers.” (From the collection of Garrie Landry; scan by Steve Sullivan)

  Passenger pigeons have been featured on the postage or commemorative stamps of such countries as Tanzania (shown left), Mozambique, Cuba (shown right), and Norway. (From the collection of Garrie Landry)

  Male passenger pigeon drawn by K. Hayashi from a live bird in the collection of Charles Otis Whitman. Hayashi was among the few artists who painted the species using live passenger pigeons as his models. This and the other pictures in Whitman’s book are considered among the most accurate drawings of the bird, although the Japanese-like background reflects the sensibility of the artist more than the reality of the bird’s habitat. (From Posthumous Works of Charles Otis Whitman, plate 29 (1919), in the collection of Bowdoin College, courtesy of Susan Wegner)

  Small Game of the Alleghenies is a stereopticon card that features an image unique in the passenger pigeon annals: along with gray squirrels and ruffed grouse, there are three freshly killed passenger pigeons. The photo was probably taken during the 1870s by R. A. Bonine. (From the collection of Destry Hoffard)

  This tintype, probably taken in the 1860s but possibly as late as the 1880s, is one of only two known photos of live passenger pigeons that do not depict the flocks kept by Whitman or the Cincinnati Zoo. Two pigeoners pose with their gear and three stool pigeons. (From the collection of Destry Hoffard)

  Old-Fort Erie with the Migration of the Wild-Pidgeon in Spring is dated April 18, 1804, and was painted by Dr. Edward Walsh. A native of Waterford, Ireland, he served as lieutenant surgeon in the British Army and was stationed in various parts of Canada from 1803–1809. His pictures of Montreal, Fort Erie, and Fort George were released as aquatints in 1811. (From the collection of the Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto; painting data by Mary Allodi of ROM)

  This haunting painting, entitled Beech Grove-Passenger Pigeon, is by David Hagerbaumer, whose watercolors often feature game birds in flight. His works have been collected in two books, Selected American Game Birds and The Bottoms. (Courtesy of David Hagerbaumer)

 

‹ Prev