Last of the Wild Buffalo
Long displayed, long dispersed, the famous Hornaday bison "family" is reunited in a new home
- By Hanna Rose Shell
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2000, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
The newspaper described the large male as "the huge buffalo bull, the giant of his race...the one believed to be the largest specimen of which there is authentic record."
The Buffalo Group quickly achieved acclaim as a symbol of the early conservation movement and as an outstanding example of the new school of taxidermy of the 1880s and 1890s. Scientists as well as laypeople recognized that the group exhibit, with its suggestion of habitat, was innovative both in method and effect. The director of the National Museum, G. Brown Goode, hailed it as a "triumph of the taxidermist's art." And soon after the first public viewing, the president of the rival American Museum of Natural History was already rallying funds to build his own buffalo group in New York City.
During the spring expedition to Montana, one of Hornaday's crew had captured a live male buffalo calf. Hornaday had long been interested in exhibiting live animals at the National Museum and decided to bring the calf back to the Smithsonian, where he was penned up on the lawn of the National Museum, today the Arts and Industries Building. Named Sandy for his yellowish-blond color, the calf remained in his enclosure during the summer months of 1886.
Over the course of a few weeks, however, Sandy began to acquire a humped back, more bulk and increasingly unruly tendencies. Andrew, Sandy's human attendant, had to cope with the fat and fractious animal. In 1887, Hornaday described the violent confrontations between animal captive and human keeper in the Cosmopolitan magazine: "Going up to the now quite demure looking calf...[Andrew] muttered, ‘Confound your hide! You son of a gun, if I wasn't so attached to ye, I'd kick the stuffing out o' ye right now!'"
A few days later the calf died, probably from eating too much damp clover. Hornaday eventually decided to incorporate Sandy into the unfinished group, draping his treated hide over a wood-and-clay form.
Before Sandy's untimely death, Smithsonian visitors had enjoyed watching the calf's daily activities through the fence of his pen near the National Museum. Inspired partly by this interest, Hornaday returned to another project, the establishment of the Department of Living Animals at the Smithsonian.
In October 1887, Director Goode implemented Hornaday's proposal on a trial basis, naming Hornaday the department's first curator. Goode and Hornaday justified the department's existence on the grounds that it would afford museum taxidermists an opportunity to observe the habits and positions of the various species as they were in life.
In December 1887, the initial collection of live North American mammals and birds moved into its quarters by the National Museum building. When the mini-menagerie was opened to the public, it was instantly popular with young and old alike. By April 1888, the collection had grown to 172 creatures. Hornaday admitted to the Washington Star that he hoped to establish a full-fledged national zoo for the conservation and study of wild animals sacred to the national heritage. He wanted living as well as dead buffalo preserved for posterity, arguing that preservation of a living herd in captivity would atone partially for America's extermination of the species.
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