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Plume hunting

Plume hunting is the hunting of wild birds to harvest their feathers, especially the more decorative plumes which were sold for use as ornamentation, such as aigrettes in millinery. The movement against the plume trade in the United Kingdom was led by Etta Lemon and other women and led to the establishment of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds. The feather trade was at its height in the late 19th and was brought to an end in the early 20th century.

Opera singer Emmy Destinn wearing a plume-covered hat, around 1909.

By the late 19th century, plume hunters had nearly wiped out the snowy egret population of the United States. Flamingoes, roseate spoonbills, great egrets, blue herons, and peafowl have also been targeted by plume hunters. The Empress of Germany's bird of paradise was also a popular target of plume hunters.

Victorian-era fashion included large hats with wide brims decorated in elaborate creations of silk flowers, ribbons, and exotic plumes. Hats sometimes included entire exotic birds that had been stuffed. Plumage often came from birds in the Florida Everglades, some of which were nearly extinguished by overhunting. By 1899, early environmentalists such as Adeline Knapp were engaged in efforts to curtail the hunting for plumes. By 1900, more than five million birds were being killed every year, including 95 percent of Florida's shore birds.[1]

In Hawaii, Kāhili are feather standards worn by the chiefly class. Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiians) did not hunt and kill the birds. Native American war bonnets and various feather headdresses also feature feathers.

Hunt for plumes edit

 
Early 20th century illustration of plume types

At the turn of the 20th century, thousands of birds were being killed in order to provide feathers to decorate women's hats. The fashion craze, which began in the 1870s, became so widespread that by 1886 birds were being killed for the millinery trade at a rate of five million a year; many species faced extinction as a result.[2] In Florida, plume birds were first driven away from the most populated areas in the northern part of the state, and forced to nest further south. Rookeries concentrated in and around the Everglades area, which had abundant food and seasonal dry periods, ideal for nesting birds. By the late 1880s, there were no longer any large numbers of plume birds within reach of Florida's most settled cities.[3]

 
The Bird on Nellie's Hat sheet music, circa 1910

The most popular plumes came from various species of egret, known as "little snowies" for their snowy-white feathers; even more prized were the "nuptial plumes", grown during the mating season and displayed by birds during courtship.[4] So-called "osprey" plumes, actually egret plumes, were used as part of British army uniforms until they were discontinued in 1889.[5] Poachers often entered the densely populated rookeries, where they would shoot and then pluck the roosting birds clean, leaving their carcasses to rot. Unprotected eggs became easy prey for predators, as were newly hatched birds, who also starved or died from exposure. One ex-poacher would later write of the practice, "The heads and necks of the young birds were hanging out of the nests by the hundreds. I am done with bird hunting forever!"[6]

Egrets, including the great egret, were decimated in the past by plume hunters, but numbers recovered when given protection in the 20th century.[7]

In 1886, 5 million birds were estimated to be killed for their feathers.[8] They were shot usually in the spring when their feathers were colored for mating and nesting. The plumes, or aigrettes, as they were called in the millinery business, sold for $32 an ounce in 1915 — which was also the price of gold then.[9] Millinery was a $17 million a year industry[10] that motivated plume harvesters to lie in wait at the nests of egrets and other birds during the nesting season, shoot the parents with small-bore rifles, and leave the chicks to starve.[9] Plumes from Everglades water birds could be found in Havana, New York City, London, and Paris. Hunters could collect plumes from a hundred birds on a good day.[11]

Nomenclature edit

According to Gilbert Pearson, there was "a special trade name for the feathers of almost every kind of bird known in the millinery business."[12]

Guy Bradley edit

In 1885, 15-year-old Guy Bradley and his older brother Louis served as scouts for noted French plume hunter Jean Chevalier on his trip to the Everglades.[13] Accompanied by their friend Charlie Pierce, the men set sail on Pierce's craft, the Bonton, ending their journey in Key West. At the time, plume feathers—selling for more than $20 an ounce ($501 in 2011)—were reportedly more valuable per weight than gold.[14] On their expedition, which lasted several weeks, the young men and Chevalier's party killed 1,397 birds of 36 species.[15] Bradley eventually became a warden protecting birds from the plume hunting trade.

Conservation edit

 
A great egret family; plume birds were often shot while sitting on their nests.

In Florida, in an effort to control plume hunting, the American Ornithologists Union and the National Association of Audubon Societies (now the National Audubon Society) persuaded the Florida State Legislature to pass a model non-game bird protection law in 1901. These organizations then employed wardens to protect rookeries, in effect establishing colonial bird sanctuaries.

 
Pelican Island NWR

Such public concern, combined with the conservation-minded President Theodore Roosevelt, led to his executive order of President on March 14, 1903, establishing Pelican Island as the first national wildlife refuge in the United States to protect egrets and other birds from extinction by plume hunters. This resulted in the initial federal land specifically set aside for a non-marketable form of wildlife (the brown pelican) when 3-acre (12,000 m2) Pelican Island was proclaimed a Federal Bird Reservation in 1903. Pelican Island National Wildlife Refuge is said to be the first bona fide "refuge". The first warden employed by the government at Pelican Island, Paul Kroegel, was an Audubon warden whose salary was $1 a month. Plume hunter guide turned game warden Guy Bradley was shot and killed after confronting plume hunters.[16]

Following the modest trend begun with Pelican Island, many other islands and parcels of land and water were quickly dedicated to the protection of various species of colonial nesting birds that were being destroyed for their plumes and other feathers. Such refuge areas included Breton National Wildlife Refuge in Breton, Louisiana (1904), Passage Key National Wildlife Refuge in Passage Key, Florida (1905), Shell Keys National Wildlife Refuge in Shell Keys, Louisiana (1907), and Key West National Wildlife Refuge in Key West, Florida (1908).

Bird City edit

Bird City is a private wildfowl refuge or bird sanctuary located on Avery Island in coastal Iberia Parish, Louisiana, founded by Tabasco sauce heir and conservationist Edward Avery McIlhenny, whose family owned Avery Island. McIlhenny established the refuge around 1895 on his own personal tract of the 2,200-acre (8.9 km2) island, a 250-acre (1.0 km2) estate known eventually as Jungle Gardens because of its lush tropical flora in response to late 19th century plume hunters nearly wiping out the snowy egret population of the United States while in pursuit of the bird's delicate feathers.

McIlhenny searched the Gulf Coast and located several surviving egrets, which he took back to his estate on Avery Island. There he turned the birds loose in a type of aviary he called a "flying cage," where the birds soon adapted to their new surroundings. In the fall McIlhenny set the birds loose to migrate south for the winter.

As he hoped, the birds returned to Avery Island in the spring, bringing with them even more snowy egrets. This pattern continued until, by 1911, the refuge served as the summer nesting ground for an estimated 100,000 egrets.[17]

Because of its early founding and example to others, Theodore Roosevelt, father of American conservationism, once referred to Bird City as "the most noteworthy reserve in the country."[18]

Today, snowy egrets continue to return to Bird City each spring to nest until resuming their migration in the fall.

Empress of Germany's bird of paradise and captive breeding edit

The Empress of Germany's bird of paradise was one of the most heavily hunted birds of paradise in the plume-hunting era and was the first bird of paradise to breed in captivity. It was bred and observed by Prince R.S. Dharmakumarsinhji of India in 1940.

References edit

  1. ^ "Everglades National Park". PBS. Retrieved November 7, 2011.
  2. ^ McIver, p. xiii
  3. ^ McIver, p. 46
  4. ^ Shearer, p. 36
  5. ^ "In the Queen's name". Bird Notes and News. 2 (1): 20. 1906.
  6. ^ Huffstodt, pp. 42–43
  7. ^ Hammerson, Geoffrey A. (2004). "Chapter 20: Birds". Connecticut Wildlife: Biodiversity, Natural History, and Conservation. Hanover, New Hampshire, and London: University Press of New England. ISBN 1-58465-369-8.
  8. ^ Grunwald, p. 120
  9. ^ a b McCally, p. 117
  10. ^ Douglas, p. 310
  11. ^ McCally, pp. 117–118
  12. ^ Pearson, T. Gilbert (1917). The bird study book. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Page. pp. 158–159.
  13. ^ Tebeau, p. 75.
  14. ^ McIver, p. 16.
  15. ^ McIver, p. 29.
  16. ^ "Everglades Biographies: Guy Bradley". Everglades Digital Library. Retrieved on July 1, 2010.
  17. ^ Edward Avery McIlhenny, Bird City (Boston: Christopher Publishing House, 1935), passim.
  18. ^ Theodore, Roosevelt, "Bird Reserves at the Mouth of the Mississippi River," A Book-Lover’s Holidays in the Open (1916), n.p.

Sources edit

  • Douglas, Marjory (1947). The Everglades: River of Grass. 60th Anniversary Edition, Pineapple Press (2007). ISBN 978-1-56164-394-3
  • Grunwald, Michael. The Swamp: The Everglades, Florida, and the Politics of Paradise. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster, 2006. ISBN 0-7432-5105-9.
  • Huffstodt, Jim. Everglades Lawmen: True Stories of Danger and Adventure in the Glades. Sarasota, FL: Pineapple Press, 2000. ISBN 1-56164-192-8.
  • McCally, David (1999). The Everglades: An Environmental History. University Press of Florida. ISBN 0-8130-2302-5.
  • McIver, Stuart B. Death in the Everglades: The Murder of Guy Bradley, America's First Martyr to Environmentalism. Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida, 2003. ISBN 0-8130-2671-7.
  • Shearer, Victoria. It Happened in the Florida Keys. Guilford, CT: Globe Pequot Press, 2008. ISBN 978-0-7627-4091-8.
  • Tebeau, Charlton W. They Lived in the Park: The Story of Man in the Everglades National Park. Coral Gables, FL: University of Miami Press, 1963.

Further reading edit

plume, hunting, examples, perspective, this, article, deal, primarily, with, united, states, represent, worldwide, view, subject, improve, this, article, discuss, issue, talk, page, create, article, appropriate, april, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, template. The examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Plume hunting is the hunting of wild birds to harvest their feathers especially the more decorative plumes which were sold for use as ornamentation such as aigrettes in millinery The movement against the plume trade in the United Kingdom was led by Etta Lemon and other women and led to the establishment of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds The feather trade was at its height in the late 19th and was brought to an end in the early 20th century Opera singer Emmy Destinn wearing a plume covered hat around 1909 By the late 19th century plume hunters had nearly wiped out the snowy egret population of the United States Flamingoes roseate spoonbills great egrets blue herons and peafowl have also been targeted by plume hunters The Empress of Germany s bird of paradise was also a popular target of plume hunters Victorian era fashion included large hats with wide brims decorated in elaborate creations of silk flowers ribbons and exotic plumes Hats sometimes included entire exotic birds that had been stuffed Plumage often came from birds in the Florida Everglades some of which were nearly extinguished by overhunting By 1899 early environmentalists such as Adeline Knapp were engaged in efforts to curtail the hunting for plumes By 1900 more than five million birds were being killed every year including 95 percent of Florida s shore birds 1 In Hawaii Kahili are feather standards worn by the chiefly class Kanaka Maoli Native Hawaiians did not hunt and kill the birds Native American war bonnets and various feather headdresses also feature feathers Contents 1 Hunt for plumes 2 Nomenclature 3 Guy Bradley 4 Conservation 5 Bird City 6 Empress of Germany s bird of paradise and captive breeding 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further readingHunt for plumes edit nbsp Early 20th century illustration of plume typesAt the turn of the 20th century thousands of birds were being killed in order to provide feathers to decorate women s hats The fashion craze which began in the 1870s became so widespread that by 1886 birds were being killed for the millinery trade at a rate of five million a year many species faced extinction as a result 2 In Florida plume birds were first driven away from the most populated areas in the northern part of the state and forced to nest further south Rookeries concentrated in and around the Everglades area which had abundant food and seasonal dry periods ideal for nesting birds By the late 1880s there were no longer any large numbers of plume birds within reach of Florida s most settled cities 3 nbsp The Bird on Nellie s Hat sheet music circa 1910The most popular plumes came from various species of egret known as little snowies for their snowy white feathers even more prized were the nuptial plumes grown during the mating season and displayed by birds during courtship 4 So called osprey plumes actually egret plumes were used as part of British army uniforms until they were discontinued in 1889 5 Poachers often entered the densely populated rookeries where they would shoot and then pluck the roosting birds clean leaving their carcasses to rot Unprotected eggs became easy prey for predators as were newly hatched birds who also starved or died from exposure One ex poacher would later write of the practice The heads and necks of the young birds were hanging out of the nests by the hundreds I am done with bird hunting forever 6 Egrets including the great egret were decimated in the past by plume hunters but numbers recovered when given protection in the 20th century 7 In 1886 5 million birds were estimated to be killed for their feathers 8 They were shot usually in the spring when their feathers were colored for mating and nesting The plumes or aigrettes as they were called in the millinery business sold for 32 an ounce in 1915 which was also the price of gold then 9 Millinery was a 17 million a year industry 10 that motivated plume harvesters to lie in wait at the nests of egrets and other birds during the nesting season shoot the parents with small bore rifles and leave the chicks to starve 9 Plumes from Everglades water birds could be found in Havana New York City London and Paris Hunters could collect plumes from a hundred birds on a good day 11 Nomenclature editAccording to Gilbert Pearson there was a special trade name for the feathers of almost every kind of bird known in the millinery business 12 Black cock feathers coque Snowy egret feathers cross aigrettes Feathers of eagles bustards albatrosses bush turkeys turkey buzzards eagle quills Crowned pigeon feathers goura Manchurian eared pheasant feathers numidie Marabou stork feathers maribou New Guinea paradise birds paradise plumesGuy Bradley editIn 1885 15 year old Guy Bradley and his older brother Louis served as scouts for noted French plume hunter Jean Chevalier on his trip to the Everglades 13 Accompanied by their friend Charlie Pierce the men set sail on Pierce s craft the Bonton ending their journey in Key West At the time plume feathers selling for more than 20 an ounce 501 in 2011 were reportedly more valuable per weight than gold 14 On their expedition which lasted several weeks the young men and Chevalier s party killed 1 397 birds of 36 species 15 Bradley eventually became a warden protecting birds from the plume hunting trade Conservation edit nbsp A great egret family plume birds were often shot while sitting on their nests In Florida in an effort to control plume hunting the American Ornithologists Union and the National Association of Audubon Societies now the National Audubon Society persuaded the Florida State Legislature to pass a model non game bird protection law in 1901 These organizations then employed wardens to protect rookeries in effect establishing colonial bird sanctuaries nbsp Pelican Island NWRSuch public concern combined with the conservation minded President Theodore Roosevelt led to his executive order of President on March 14 1903 establishing Pelican Island as the first national wildlife refuge in the United States to protect egrets and other birds from extinction by plume hunters This resulted in the initial federal land specifically set aside for a non marketable form of wildlife the brown pelican when 3 acre 12 000 m2 Pelican Island was proclaimed a Federal Bird Reservation in 1903 Pelican Island National Wildlife Refuge is said to be the first bona fide refuge The first warden employed by the government at Pelican Island Paul Kroegel was an Audubon warden whose salary was 1 a month Plume hunter guide turned game warden Guy Bradley was shot and killed after confronting plume hunters 16 Following the modest trend begun with Pelican Island many other islands and parcels of land and water were quickly dedicated to the protection of various species of colonial nesting birds that were being destroyed for their plumes and other feathers Such refuge areas included Breton National Wildlife Refuge in Breton Louisiana 1904 Passage Key National Wildlife Refuge in Passage Key Florida 1905 Shell Keys National Wildlife Refuge in Shell Keys Louisiana 1907 and Key West National Wildlife Refuge in Key West Florida 1908 Bird City editBird City is a private wildfowl refuge or bird sanctuary located on Avery Island in coastal Iberia Parish Louisiana founded by Tabasco sauce heir and conservationist Edward Avery McIlhenny whose family owned Avery Island McIlhenny established the refuge around 1895 on his own personal tract of the 2 200 acre 8 9 km2 island a 250 acre 1 0 km2 estate known eventually as Jungle Gardens because of its lush tropical flora in response to late 19th century plume hunters nearly wiping out the snowy egret population of the United States while in pursuit of the bird s delicate feathers McIlhenny searched the Gulf Coast and located several surviving egrets which he took back to his estate on Avery Island There he turned the birds loose in a type of aviary he called a flying cage where the birds soon adapted to their new surroundings In the fall McIlhenny set the birds loose to migrate south for the winter As he hoped the birds returned to Avery Island in the spring bringing with them even more snowy egrets This pattern continued until by 1911 the refuge served as the summer nesting ground for an estimated 100 000 egrets 17 Because of its early founding and example to others Theodore Roosevelt father of American conservationism once referred to Bird City as the most noteworthy reserve in the country 18 Today snowy egrets continue to return to Bird City each spring to nest until resuming their migration in the fall Empress of Germany s bird of paradise and captive breeding editThe Empress of Germany s bird of paradise was one of the most heavily hunted birds of paradise in the plume hunting era and was the first bird of paradise to breed in captivity It was bred and observed by Prince R S Dharmakumarsinhji of India in 1940 References edit Everglades National Park PBS Retrieved November 7 2011 McIver p xiiiharvnb error no target CITEREFMcIver help McIver p 46harvnb error no target CITEREFMcIver help Shearer p 36harvnb error no target CITEREFShearer help In the Queen s name Bird Notes and News 2 1 20 1906 Huffstodt pp 42 43harvnb error no target CITEREFHuffstodt help Hammerson Geoffrey A 2004 Chapter 20 Birds Connecticut Wildlife Biodiversity Natural History and Conservation Hanover New Hampshire and London University Press of New England ISBN 1 58465 369 8 Grunwald p 120harvnb error no target CITEREFGrunwald help a b McCally p 117harvnb error no target CITEREFMcCally help Douglas p 310harvnb error no target CITEREFDouglas help McCally pp 117 118harvnb error no target CITEREFMcCally help Pearson T Gilbert 1917 The bird study book Garden City N Y Doubleday Page pp 158 159 Tebeau p 75 McIver p 16 McIver p 29 Everglades Biographies Guy Bradley Everglades Digital Library Retrieved on July 1 2010 Edward Avery McIlhenny Bird City Boston Christopher Publishing House 1935 passim Theodore Roosevelt Bird Reserves at the Mouth of the Mississippi River A Book Lover s Holidays in the Open 1916 n p Sources editDouglas Marjory 1947 The Everglades River of Grass 60th Anniversary Edition Pineapple Press 2007 ISBN 978 1 56164 394 3 Grunwald Michael The Swamp The Everglades Florida and the Politics of Paradise New York NY Simon amp Schuster 2006 ISBN 0 7432 5105 9 Huffstodt Jim Everglades Lawmen True Stories of Danger and Adventure in the Glades Sarasota FL Pineapple Press 2000 ISBN 1 56164 192 8 McCally David 1999 The Everglades An Environmental History University Press of Florida ISBN 0 8130 2302 5 McIver Stuart B Death in the Everglades The Murder of Guy Bradley America s First Martyr to Environmentalism Gainesville FL University Press of Florida 2003 ISBN 0 8130 2671 7 Shearer Victoria It Happened in the Florida Keys Guilford CT Globe Pequot Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 7627 4091 8 Tebeau Charlton W They Lived in the Park The Story of Man in the Everglades National Park Coral Gables FL University of Miami Press 1963 Further reading editBoase Tessa 2018 Mrs Pankhurst s Purple Feather Aurum ISBN 978 1781316542 Supuma Miriam 2018 Endemic birds in Papua New Guinea s montane forests human use and conservation phd thesis James Cook University doi 10 25903 5d0194ca93995 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Plume hunting amp oldid 1187687424, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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