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Wilderness Legacy:

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Title: Wilderness Legacy:


1
  • Wilderness Legacy
  • How Americas Hunters and Anglers Helped Save the
    (Natural) World

2
  • Early Americans, awed by the natural abundance
    of North America, could imagine no end to its
    natural wealth. When it comes to Nature, early
    American history is essentially a story of
    overkill. American bison killed by the millions
    are just one well-known example. Fish and
    wildlife from passenger pigeon to beaver to
    whitetail deer to Atlantic cod were slaughtered
    to extinction or near-extinction between 1776 and
    1876. Yet out of this carnage came a remarkable
    revolution An ethic to conserve wilderness
    championed by hunters themselves.

3
  • The first American hunters to fight for the
    wilderness were Native Americans. Facing the
    destruction of their ancient way of life, people
    like Lakota chief Sitting Bull fought bravely,
    then negotiated for what they could save of their
    sacred land. As Sitting Bull said When the
    buffalo are gone, we will eat mice, for we are
    hunters and must have our freedom.

4
  • John J. Audubon, 1785-1851, was Americas first
    internationally famous artist. His two passions
    were hunting and painting. His favorite subject
    was birds like the pair of gyrfalcons featured
    here. Audubons legacy goes beyond the fine arts.
    He helped build Americas pride in its unique
    natural history. As an eye-witness to the
    destruction of entire species such as the
    passenger pigeon and the habitat that supported
    them, Audubon was an early voice for stopping the
    wholesale destruction of Nature.

5
  • By the 1850s, a seed of a conservation ethic
    germinated in the minds of a few, far-sighted
    Americans like Henry David Thoreau. For Thoreau,
    wild nature wasnt just resources to be subdued,
    but had value in its own right. That implied a
    responsibility toward conservation. On a moose
    hunt in Maine, Thoreau implored his camp-mates
    not to waste any meat of a moose they had killed.
    He wrote I trust that I shall have a better
    excuse for killing a moose than to hang my hat
    from its horns.

6
  • Ironically, one of the early champions of
    preserving the wilderness and native hunting
    cultures rode with Custer into Sitting Bulls
    sacred Black Hills. Decades later, George B.
    Grinnell fought for the rights and dignity of
    native tribes. He also promoted protecting
    wilderness as editor of the magazine Forest and
    Stream. Grinnell helped found the Boone and
    Crockett Club, which lobbied for the protection
    of Yellowstone National Park wildlife and the
    creation of Glacier National Park.

7
  • American conservation received a seismic jolt in
    1901, when Theodore Roosevelt was propelled into
    the presidency of the United States by the
    assassination of William McKinley. Roosevelt was
    greatly influenced by his early years roaming the
    American wilderness, rifle in hand. During his
    two terms in office, Roosevelt protected more
    than 230 million acres of land for generations of
    Americans. He urged America to preserve large
    tracts of wilderness and game for all lovers of
    nature and for the exercise of skill of the
    hunter, whether he is or is not a man of means.

8
  • Aldo Leopold is called the father of wildlife
    management. His 1949 classic A Sand County
    Almanac is perhaps the most eloquent statement of
    conservation. Like Roosevelt, Leopold saw
    wildlife as the birthright of all Americans. As
    his wildlife management principles became
    established, wildlife like deer, elk, beaver and
    turkey began to rebound. He convinced the Forest
    Service to create the first wilderness area, the
    Gila, in New Mexico in 1924. Throughout his life,
    Leopold saw the land through the eyes of a
    hunter Trigger-itch, wanderlust and buck-fever
    are simply the genetic raw material out of which
    perception is built.

9
  • Idaho native Ted Trueblood grew up hunting and
    fishing in his home state, then became editor of
    what is now called Field and Stream magazine
    (following a line of succession from Grinnell.)
    For 40 years, Trueblood edited the magazine,
    helping millions enjoy the outdoors, but also
    promoting conservation of wildlife, habitat and
    wilderness. He is most often credited with
    helping conserve the mighty River of No Return
    Wilderness in the Salmon River country in 1980.
    Over his career, Trueblood saw populations of
    elk, deer and other game species reach modern
    highs.

10
  • Biologist Jim Posewitz spent most of his career
    at the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and
    Parks. Upon his retirement, Pozewitz launched
    Orion, the Hunters Institute, dedicated to
    promoting ethical hunting. Poz is also known
    for his passionate defense of wild country and
    free-flowing rivers, which support wildlife, fish
    and Americas outdoor heritage. Now that American
    wildlife is once again thriving, Posewitz makes
    certain that legacy is not forgotten.

11
  • Mountaineer, backcountry skier and avid bird
    hunter from Portland, Oregon, Michelle Halle is a
    member of a new generation of hunter/conservationi
    st. As a board member of Backcountry Hunters and
    Anglers, she continues the tradition of seeing
    the land through the eyes of a hunter. Now, more
    than ever, Americans treasure their rushing
    waters and big, wild habitat. Now, more than
    ever, Americans want quiet places where they can
    experience solitude and the sounds of Nature. Now
    more than ever, hunters need to get involved.

12
  • Backcountry Hunters and Anglers is proud to
    carry on the American tradition of sportsmen and
    -women supporting wilderness. We work to protect
    the big, natural areas and natural processes that
    support our hunting and fishing heritage and to
    stop the abuse of public land. We depend on our
    members. If you share our values, we urge you to
    join us today.
  • www.backcountryhunters.org
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