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 3 of 4)
In 1888, Hornaday and Smithsonian Secretary Samuel Langley drafted the zoological park proposal and forwarded it to congressional sponsors. The bill finally passed in 1889. Said a sponsor, Senator James Beck of Kentucky, "It is the duty of the National Government to secure a herd of American bison, and preserve it under the best conditions."
The legislation established the Zoological Park Commission to oversee the park's construction. Langley named Hornaday as temporary superintendent. Through donation, the Zoo soon acquired six buffalo, the first living buffalo specimens to be the property of the U.S. government. Their preservation as a living display exemplified the zoological park ideal that would guide American zoological gardens for the next half-century.
Since Hornaday's era, the number of buffalo on American soil has skyrocketed, thanks to his efforts and others. In 1902, twenty-one captive bison and 23 wild animals in Yellowstone National Park formed the nucleus of the herd of about 2,500 that survives there today. Meanwhile, other herds throughout North America, including protected herds and livestock animals on ranches, bring the total number of bison to about 250,000 animals. To some extent, all, in the United States at least, owe their survival to Hornaday.
Hornaday's Buffalo Group remained on display at the Smithsonian for almost 70 years after its first unveiling in 1888. From 1911 until 1957, the Buffalo Group stood on the first floor of what is today the National Museum of Natural History, across the Mall from its original location. In 1955, the Natural History museum's mammals division began its mid-century modernization project. By the 1940s, dioramas — displays that included painted composite backgrounds behind mounted animals and accessories — proliferated in North American natural history museums. For the modernization project, the mammal curators hoped to update the displays of the larger North American quadrupeds. The Buffalo Group would have to go, even though it contained the last wild buffalo. Not only did the Buffalo Group seem old-fashioned by the mid-20th century but the skins had not been mounted to the standards of 1950s taxidermists, who used hollow plaster-and-burlap molds rather than Hornaday's wood-and-clay forms.
When, in 1957, twenty years after Hornaday's death, the Buffalo Group was dismantled and curators found the note from Hornaday, they treasured it, but they chose not to heed its advice. They moved the six Hornaday buffalo downstairs to the basement and replaced them with a new display, employing fresh and handsome pelts of animals recently killed in the National Bison Range in Montana, which Hornaday had helped establish in 1908. The new buffalo skins, unlike their predecessors, did not belong to animals that had ever been free.
But the Hornaday buffalo did not stay long in the dusty Washington, D.C. basement. Instead of rotting away to "dust and ashes," in 1958 the specimens — bull, spike bull, yearling, two cows and Sandy — were shipped to Missoula, Montana, where the University of Montana wanted to incorporate them into a small museum.
Instead, the school eventually distributed the specimens to various other sites in Montana. The large bull — the "splendid animal" — was given to the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks, where it remained until it was acquired in 1970 by Jack Lepley, director of the Montana Agricultural Center and Museum in Fort Benton.
But in 1988, Doug Coffman, a writer and naturalist in Eugene, Oregon, read about Hornaday's Buffalo Group and decided to track down its components. Coffman had become interested in the group as a symbol not only of the buffalo and their near extermination but also of the birth and many successes of the American conservation movement.
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