Map showing the Extermination of the American Bison, William Hornaday 1889
Map showing the Extermination of the American Bison, William Hornaday 1889
Map showing the Extermination of the American Bison, William Hornaday 1889
Map showing the Extermination of the American Bison, William Hornaday 1889
Map showing the Extermination of the American Bison, William Hornaday 1889

Map showing the Extermination of the American Bison, William Hornaday 1889

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 Re-printed - Hornaday's Mapping of the Bison Extermination, by years.

         These are art quality reprographics-prints were done off an "Original" -the one in the pictures below with the folds - published map as described below.     

         William T. Hornaday was, at the time he created this historic work, the Chief Taxidermist for the Smithsonian Museum in Washington D.C.

 After reviewing the Museum's collection and conducting a written survey (copy of which is also available), he recognized the rapid decline in the population of American Bison.

He personally traveled "west" to collect specimens for the Museum in anticipation of the Bison's extinction, and was shocked at what he saw and learned:

"Just as a carefree and joyous swimmer for pleasure suddenly is drawn into a whirlpool - in which he can swim but from which he cannot escape - so in 1886 I was draw into the maelstrom."  Bechtel 2012, quoting Hornaday's unpublished autobiography.

Hornaday prepared a massive report for the Smithsonian on the extermination of the bison, filled with important observations and data.  The report was published in the Journal of The Smithsonian Institution.

But this map tells the story on a single page. The dark red circle on the map shows "the area once inhabited by the the American Bison," and the dates in red tells the date of extinction in each locale. We learn there were bison in Indiana and Kentucky until 1810, and in Iowa and Missouri until 1870, and the much smaller concentric green circles show the same just 10 years later.

Hornaday returned to Washington a changed man. He spent the rest of his life as perhaps the first effective voice for the preservation of species. He played a major role in the survival not only of the American Bison, but the Alaskan fur seal, the snowy egret and others.

This "original" map was cut from the Smithsonian Journal where it was originally published (no, I did not do the dastardly deed, but did get the preservation done.).  And no, it is not the hand done original that Hornaday did.  That is in the library of congress   

  • Issued with: United States. National Museum. Annual report of the Board of regents of the Smithsonian institution ... Report, 1887

These are printed on light card stock for easy framing.  Small prints shipped flat; large shipped rolled in mailing tube.  The small copies are also fun wall hangings and being copies, are just as accurate.   16" x 24" 

Large copies are the actual size of the original and make great displays.  

small - 4-drawer in CRM Gallery

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The Dearnley Family has been running S & D Spinning since the 1800s. This is one of the last large scale wool mills left in the U.S. and they are absolutely crucial to us keeping our production here in the U.S.

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