vermont regulations. market hunting era – 1858 to 1896

25
Vermont Regulations

Upload: imogen-garrison

Post on 05-Jan-2016

216 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

Vermont Regulations

Page 2: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

Page 3: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

Exploitation of Wildlife

Visionary People Put a Stop to Market Hunting

Class Conflict

Landowner vs. Non-landownerState resident vs. Non-residentRural vs. UrbanNorth vs. South

The Gentleman Hunter

Page 4: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

Uncontrolled Exploitation

Page 5: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896
Page 6: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

Unregulated Hunt Techniques

Page 7: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

Sink Box

Page 8: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

Other Techniques

• Deer Hounding

• Netting

• Mating Season

• Night Hunting

• Passenger Pigeon

• Railroad Hunts

Page 9: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

Where?

• Cape Cod• Great South Bay, NY• Currituck Sound, NC• Chesapeake Bay, MD• Marsh Island, LA• Sunk Lands, AR• Klamath Lake Region, CA• Anywhere in the Upper Midwest

Page 10: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

National Wildlife Refuge System

Page 11: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

What Markets?

Page 12: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

Other Markets

• Millinery Trade

• Pot Hunters

• Fur Market - but only a minor market

Page 13: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

1858 - 1896

• What Started It?– Railroad Land Grants– Augustus Swift– Swift Meats

• What Stopped It?– Geer vs. Connecticut– Lacey Act

Page 14: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

Visionariesor

Elitists?

Page 15: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896
Page 16: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

Theodore Roosevelt

“…the hardier and manlier the sport is the more attractive it is, and…there is [no] place in the ranks of true sportsmen either for the game-butcher, on the one hand, or, on the other,for the man who wishes to do all his shooting in preserves,and to shirk rough hard work.

Page 17: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

George Bird Grinell: Editor of Forest and Stream

1874 - “The known fact that all the best measures for the protection of game…must always emanate from those who shoot and fish for their pleasure.”

1881 - “Game legislation is too much in the hands of know-nothings, and know-nothings are…a class of man who are concerned not to preserve the game, but to squeeze the almighty dollar out of it as it goes.”

1894 - “Game laws can benefit the community only as, and insuch degree as they are in the interest of the sportsman.”

Page 18: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

William T. Hornaday - Director of Smithsonian

1913 - “Italians are pouring into American in a steady stream…Toward wildlife the Italian laborer is a human mongoose.Give him power to act, and he will quickly exterminate everywild thing that wears feathers or hair. To our songbirds he isliterally a ‘pestilence that walketh at noonday’.”

“[The] army of black hunters and their dogs cross field afterfield, combing the country with fine teeth that leave neitherwild animal nor bird behind.”

Page 19: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896
Page 20: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

Objections

• Ballistics• Big Guns• Swivel Guns• Punt guns

• Efficiency• Snares• Traps• Fire Hunting• Crusting

• Unfair Advantage• Boats• Night Hunting• Water Hunting• Deer Hounding!

Page 21: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

Rules of the Game/Rules of Fair Chase

• Ensuring an Uncertain Outcome

• Limited Hunt Seasons

• Limiting Technological Advantage

Page 22: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896
Page 23: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896
Page 24: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

The Gentleman Hunter

“A grouse which gives a man a holiday afield is worth more to the community than a grouse snared or shot for the market stalls.”

Pinnacle of “Manhood” Rugged Independent Wise in the ways of nature Restrained/Refined

Page 25: Vermont Regulations. Market Hunting Era – 1858 to 1896

Legacy

• Stopped waterfowl exploitation

• Set us on the route to contemporary wildlife management

But…

• Urban interest won out over rural interests?

• Dispossessed rural and ethnic peoples?