<p class="caption2"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX</SPAN></p>
<p class="caption2 pmb2">Miscellaneous Notes</p>
<div class="dropcap">T</div>
<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">T</span>HE earliest mention of the wild pigeon I have
been able to find is the following, taken from
<i>Forest and Stream</i>, to which it was contributed
by F. C. Browne, Framingham, Mass. It is
from an old print entitled, "Two Voyages to New England,
Made During the Years 1638-63," by John Josselyn,
Gent. Published in 1674. I am not so fortunate as
to possess an original copy. This extract is from the Boston
reprint of 1865, and is from the "Second Voyage"
(1663), which has a full account of the wild beasts,
birds and fishes of the new settlement:</p>
<p>"The Pidgeons, of which there are millions of millions.
I have seen a flight of Pidgeons in the Spring,
and at Michaelmas when they return back to the South-ward,
for four or five miles, that to my thinking had
neither beginning nor ending, length nor breadth, and
so thick that I could see no Sun. They join Nest to
Nest and Tree to Tree by their Nests many miles together
in Pine-Trees. I have bought at Boston a dozen
Pidgeons ready pulled and garbidged for three pence.
But of late they are much diminished, the English taking
them with Nets."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It will be noted that the wild pigeons began to be
"much diminished" even at that early date.</p>
<p>The following extract is from the journal of the
voyage of Father Gravier in the year 1700:</p>
<p>"Through the Country of the Illinois to the Mouth
of the Mississippi."</p>
<p>Under date of October 7th he says:</p>
<p>"Below the mouth of the Ouabache (meaning the
Wabash River), we saw such a great quantity of wild
pigeons that the air was darkened and quite covered by
them."</p>
<p>The journal of Alexander Henry, the younger, written
in August, 1800, states that large numbers of wild
pigeons were seen and used for food by his party. This
was at a point on the Red River not far north of what
is now Grand Forks, N. D.</p>
<p>The Passenger Pigeon found a place in a book called
"Quebec and Its Environments; Being a Picturesque
Guide to the Stranger." Printed by Thomas Cary &
Co., Freemasons' Hall, Buade Street, 1831. A rare
copy was found in the library of the late Charles Dean,
having been purchased by him while visiting Quebec in
1841. It is now in the possession of Ruthven Deane of
Chicago. I quote from this old guide-book as follows:</p>
<div id="fp218" class="figcenter" style="width: 612px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fp_218.png" width-obs="612" height-obs="454" alt="" />
<p class="fig_title">PIGEON NET</p>
<p class="fig_caption">Taken from an old etching</p>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"At one period of the year numerous and immense
flights of pigeons visit Canada, when the population
make a furious war against them both by guns and nets;
they supply the inhabitants with a material part of their
subsistence, and are sold in the market at Quebec remarkably
cheap, often as low as a shilling per dozen,
and sometimes even at a less rate. It appears that the
pigeon prefers the loftiest and most leafless tree to
settle on. In addition to the natural beauty of St. Ann
and its environs, the process by which the inhabitants
take the pigeons is worth remarking. Upon the loftiest
tree, long bare poles are slantingly fixed; small pieces
of wood are placed transversely across this pole, upon
which the birds crowd; below, in ambush, the sportsman
with a long gun enfilades the whole length of the pole,
and, when he fires, few if any escape. Innumerable
poles are prepared at St. Ann for this purpose. The
other method they have of taking them is by nets, by
which means they are enabled to preserve them alive,
and kill them occasionally for their own use or for the
market, when it has ceased to be glutted with them.
Behind Madam Fontane's this sport may be seen in perfection.
The nets, which are very large, are placed at
the end of an avenue of trees (for it appears the pigeons
choose an avenue to fly down); opposite a large tree,
upon erect poles two nets are suspended, one facing the
avenue, the other the tree; another is placed over them,
which is fixed at one end, and supported by pulleys and
two perpendicular poles at the opposite; a man is hid
in a small covered house under the tree, with a rope
leading from the pulleys in his hand. Directly the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</SPAN></span>
pigeons fly against the perpendicular nets, he pulls the
rope, when the top net immediately falls and incloses
the whole flock; by this process vast numbers are taken."</p>
<p>"Tanner's Narrative," a story (authentic) of thirty
years among the Indians, published in 1830, refers frequently
to great numbers of pigeons, and gives their
range from the Kentucky, Big Miami and Ohio Rivers
to Lake Winnipeg, or "The Lake of Dirty Waters."</p>
<p>Mr. Osborn further adds: "Tanner was a United
States Indian interpreter at the Soo."</p>
<p>William Glazier made a trip to the headwaters of
the Mississippi River in 1881 and wrote a book entitled
"Down the Mississippi River." In three different
places in this book he mentions seeing wild pigeons. In
one place he says that a small flock of pigeons dropped
down in the tops of some tall pines near him.</p>
<p>In Hayden's Survey Report, Interior Department, as
given in Coues' "Birds of the Northwest," 1874, it is
mentioned that wild pigeons were found on the Pacific
coast, and Cooper reports them in the Rocky Mountains.
[High authority, but it must have referred to
the band-tailed pigeon.—W. B. M.]</p>
<p class="pmt2">From the foregoing chapters I have summarized the
latest reports of the presence of the wild pigeon in its
former haunts. These instances have been reported as
follows:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>N. W. Judy & Co., St. Louis, Mo., the largest dealers
in poultry and game in that section, said, in 1895, they
had had no wild pigeons for two years; the last they
received were from Siloam Springs, Ark. This would
mean that they were on the market during the season of
1893. Until 1890 frequent reports were recorded of
pigeons seen singly, in pairs and in small flocks.</p>
<p>In 1891 Mr. F. M. Woodruff, Assistant Curator of
the Chicago Academy of Sciences, secured a pair at
Lake Forest, Ill.</p>
<p>A nest with two eggs and two birds were collected
by C. B. Brown of Chicago in the spring of 1893 at
English Lake, Ind.</p>
<p>In September, 1893, three were reported in Lake
County, Ill.</p>
<p>In April of the same year, a male pigeon was reported
as having been seen in Lincoln Park, Ill.</p>
<p>Mr. R. W. Stafford of Chicago, Ill., reported seeing
a flock in the latter part of September, 1894, at Marengo,
Ill.</p>
<p>Mr. John L. Stockton, Highland Park, Ill., reported
that while trout fishing on the Little Oconto River,
Wis., early in June, 1895, he saw a flock of ten pigeons
for several consecutive days near his camp.</p>
<p>A young female was killed at Lake Forest, Ill., in
August, 1895.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>In October, 1895, Dr. Ernest Copeland of Milwaukee
killed one in Delta, Northern Peninsula, Mich.</p>
<p>On December 17, 1896, C. N. Holden, Jr., while
hunting quail in Oregon County, Mo., observed a flock
of about fifty birds.</p>
<p>Chief Pokagon reports there was a small nesting of
pigeons near the head waters of the Au Sable River in
Michigan, during the spring of 1896.</p>
<p>A. Fugleburg of Oshkosh, Wis., reports that on the
morning of August 14, 1897, he saw a flock of pigeons
flying over Lake Winnebago from Fisherman's Island
to Stony Brook. This flock was followed by six more
flocks containing from thirty-five to eighty pigeons each.
The same observer reports that on September 2, 1897,
a friend of his reported having seen a flock of about
twenty-five near Lake Butte des Mortes, Wis.</p>
<p>W. F. Rightmire reports that while driving along
the highway north of Cook, Johnson County, Neb.,
August 18, 1897, he saw a flock of seventy-five to one
hundred birds; some feeding on the ground, others
perched in the trees.</p>
<p>A. B. Covert of Ann Arbor, President at one time of
the Michigan Ornithological Club, reports seeing stray
birds during 1892 and 1894, and states also that on
October 1, 1898, he saw a flock of 200 and watched
them nearly all day.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>T. E. Douglas of Grayling reports seeing a flock of
ten near West Branch, Mich., in 1895, and in 1900 he
saw three on one of the branches of the Au Sable River
in Michigan.</p>
<p>In 1897 C. S. Osborn of Sault Ste Marie reported
having seen a single wild bird flying with the tame
pigeons around the town.</p>
<p>In 1897 or 1898 C. E. Jennison of Bay City saw six
or seven at Thunder Bay Island near Alpena, Mich.</p>
<p>In 1900 Neal Brown of Wausau, Wis., killed one
near Babcock, Wis., in September.</p>
<p>George King of Otsego County, Mich., in 1900 saw
a flock of one dozen or more birds on the Black River,
and he says he heard two "holler" in 1902, but was
unable to find them. In May, 1905, he is certain he saw
six near Vanderbilt, Mich.</p>
<p>John Burroughs reports that a friend of his, Charles
W. Benton, saw a large flock of wild pigeons near
Prattsville, Greene County, N. Y., in April, 1906.</p>
<p class="caption3">EARLY LEGISLATION TO SAVE THE PIGEON</p>
<p>Wild pigeons were used largely by trap-shooters for
tournaments. In 1881, 20,000 of them were killed in
one of these trap-shooting butcheries on Coney Island,
N. Y. The following editorial protest against this outrage
appeared in <i>Forest and Stream</i>, July 14, 1881:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</SPAN></span></p>
<p><i>Mr. Bergh's Anti-Pigeon Bill.</i>—Just as we go to
press we learn that the Senate has passed the bill prepared
by Mr. Henry Bergh prohibiting the trap-shooting
of pigeons. The bill awaits Governor Cornell's
signature before becoming a law. Its provisions are:</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Section 1.</span> Any person who shall keep or use any
live pigeon, fowl, or other bird or animal for the purpose
of a target or to be shot at either for amusement
or as a test of skill in marksmanship, and any person
who shall shoot at any pigeon, fowl, or other bird or
animal, as aforesaid, or be a party to any such shooting
of any pigeon, fowl or other bird or animal; and any
person who shall rent any building, shed, room, yard,
field, or other premises, or shall suffer or permit the use
of any building, shed, room, yard, field, or other premises
for the purpose of shooting any pigeon, fowl, or
other bird or animal, as aforesaid, shall be guilty of a
misdemeanor.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Section 2.</span> Nothing herein contained shall apply to
the shooting of any wild game in its wild state.</p>
<p>The bill is a direct and not wholly unexpected result
of the Coney Island pigeon-killing tournament of the
New York State Association for the Protection of Fish
and Game. Had the sport of pigeon shooting been confined
to individual clubs of gentlemen testing their skill
at the traps, it is doubtful if the matter ever would have
received, as it would not have merited, public attention.
But when a society, which organized ostensibly for the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</SPAN></span>
protection of game, treats the public to such a spectacle
as that at Coney Island, neglects the matter with which
it should be concerned and devotes 20,000 pigeons
brought from their nesting ground to its wholesale
slaughter, its members can hardly look for any other
public sentiment than exactly that feeling which has
been aroused. An afternoon's shoot at a few pigeons,
and a ten days' shoot at unlimited numbers of helpless
birds—many of them squabs, unable to fly, and others
too exhausted to do so—are regarded by the public as
two very different things.</p>
<p> </p>
<hr class="full" />
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<div class="transnote">
<p class="caption2">Transcriber's Note</p>
<p>Obvious punctuation and spelling errors were corrected.</p>
<p>One 'signature' of Ruthven Deane was modified from the printed version
to match the others.</p>
<p>Where quotations began and were not closed, a closing quotation mark
was placed at the end of that paragraph:</p>
<p class="p0" style="margin-left:5em;"><SPAN href="#Page_155"></SPAN> "There are no wild pigeons in Iosco County…<br/>
<SPAN href="#Page_71"></SPAN> "In three years' time…</p>
<p><SPAN name="Transcription"></SPAN>Transcription of circular shown facing
<SPAN href="#Page_92">page 92</SPAN> for screen readers:</p>
<p class="bbox" style="width:70%; margin:0 auto; padding:1.5em; text-align:center;">
AMONG THE PIGEONS.<br/>
<br/>
A Reply to Professor Roney's Account of<br/>
the Michigan Nestings of 1878.<br/>
<br/>
—BY—<br/>
<br/>
E. T. MARTIN,<br/>
<br/>
In the <span class="smcap">Chicago Field</span>, Jan. 25, 1879.<br/>
<br/>
Illustration: building and pigeons<br/>
<br/>
E. T. Martin's Headquarters at Boyne Falls, Michigan, during the
Nesting of 1878.</p>
</div>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<hr class="pg" />
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