|
This site built and maintained by: GREANVILLE ASSOCIATESand CRESCENT COMMUNICATIONS •Rev. 12.1.05 Copyright ANIMAL PEOPLE, INC. 1992--2006
|
MONTH: November 2006 Chicago pioneered urban wildlife habitat conservation, but not "be kind to animals"
CHICAGO--Urban wildlife
habitat conservation is often traced to the 1914 creation of the Forest
Preserve District of Cook County. Foresighted planning bequeathed to Chicago
and surrounding suburbs a protected greenbelt and wildlife migration corridors
that today hosts an abundance of animals of most species common to the
midwest. Unlike in Milwaukee, however, an hour's
drive or train ride to the north, the major Chicago-area humane societies
and animal control agencies have yet to become deeply involved with wildlife. Focusing on dogs and cats is still enough
to keep them busy. Yet this means ceding the primary role in responding
to public concerns about wildlife to other institutions, whose focal message
is not "be kind to animals," of all species, and whose agendas
are often at odds with humane concerns. Henry Bergh, who founded the American
SPCA in New York City in 1866, also inspired through correspondence the
1879 formation of the Wisconsin Humane Society. The only known statute
of Bergh stands in front of the Wisconsin Humane shelter. A Bergh contemporary and fellow New Yorker,
landscape architect Frederic Law Olmsted (1822-1903), as profoundly influenced
Chicago, with significant benefits for animals, but unlike Bergh, Olmsted
did not actually have animals in mind. Though animal habitat was a component
of Olmsted's vision, he seems not to have thought much--if at all--about
how the animals dwelling in the parks he designed might be treated, especially
if their behavior became problematic. Best known for directing the conversion
of outmoded market squares into Central Park in New York City, Olmsted
later designed the Riverside subdivision in Chicago, and the Emerald Necklace
park chain ringing Boston. His last great project was the layout for the
1893 Chicago World's Fair. Olmsted's early career emphasized reintroducing
naturalistic green spaces to densely populated urban areas, but he became
increasingly interested in protecting habitat close to cities against
urban encroachment. He theorized that urban development could jump over
greenbelts instead of overrunning them. The Forest Preserve District of Cook County
was the first serious test of the greenbelt approach. The six-forest system
dividing the inner and outer Chicago suburbs began to take shape with
the 1916 purchase of the 500-acre Deer Grove Pasture, for the then steep
price of $700 an acre. A year later the district bought the facilities
now known as the Harold "Hal" Tyrell Trailside Museum. Built
in 1874, the site had already served for seven years as a finishing school
for wealthy young women, and then for 36 years as a home for troubled
young men. At a time when many humane societies ran orphanages, before
they opened shelters for animals, the home might have evolved into an
animal protection organization, as others did--but animal care was introduced
only after the building served for 14 years as the Forest Preserve District
headquarters. In 1931 it finally became the Trailside nature museum, recognized
as the first such facility in the Midwest--and probably also be the first
Chicago-area wildlife rehabilitation center. The Forest Preserve District later added
the River Trail Nature Center in Northbrook, which is today a quiet mini-zoo
of injured raptors, fox, coyotes, and other rescued animals who are not
believed to be capable of surviving if released. River Trail has in the
past been criticized by both animal rights activists and conservationists
for keeping captive live animals--even well-habituated to visitors-- whom
some have believed should be euthanized rather than exhibited. The animal
rights argument was that the animals are allegedly exploited. The conservation
argument was that keeping them amounts to investing heavily in animals
who may never mate and raise young. Neither argument seems to be much
voiced lately, after explosions in the early 1990s, but other controversies
involving the greenbelts and nature centers have flared among animal advocates. One is the long-running battle between
opponents of culling deer and forest preserve managers who believe that
deer overpopulation is destroying habitat for other species. Opposition
to using rocket-thrown nets to catch entire deer herds at once, and use
of captive bolt guns to kill the netted deer, helped drive the growth
of SHARK, founded by Steve Hindi in 1992 as the Chicago Animal Rights
Coalition. SHARK has more recently led protest against sharpshooters'
tactics--and has used experience gained in surveillance of Cook County
Forest Preserve deer culls to help fight culls in Ohio, Iowa, and Minnesota. Purges of non-native species from the
Cook County Forest Preserves, led by The Nature Conservancy, were a focal
issue in the late 1990s for Chicago-area wildlife rehabilitator Davida
Terry and her organization Voice for Wildlife, no longer active. Private initiatives also contributed to
the preservation of green space and the growth of nature centers around
Chicago. Perhaps the most notable example is The Grove, the 124-acre family
homestead beside the Milwaukee Road maintained by horticulturalist Dr.
John Kennicott and descendents from 1836 to 1976. The bur oaks and shagbark hickory for
which Kennicot named The Grove still stand, shading and sheltering abundant
wildlife--but The Grove has long been linked more to killing in the name
of conservation than to respect for animals' lives. Kennicott's son, naturalist Robert Kennicott,
identified the rare Kirtland's snake at The Grove. He named the snake
for his mentor, Cleveland natural scientist Jared Kirtland. Kirtland introduced
him to a brief but prolific career in killing wildlife to serve science
and education. "Before his untimely death in May 1866 at age 30,"
recalled Liz Pensoneau in a 2001 history of The Grove, "Robert founded
the Chicago Academy of Sciences, made the original collections for a museum
at North-western University, and contributed extensive collections to
the Smithsonian Institution. He also made three exploratory trips to Canada
and Alaska, sending unusual specimens to the Smithsonian. His explorations
were instrumental," Penson-eau wrote, "in the U.S. purchase
of Alaska." Later, Louise Redfield Peattie, who lived
at The Grove as a child, and her husband Donald Culross Peattie contributed
to the fame of The Grove and the growth of the U.S. conservation movement
with their books Ameri-can Acres (1936) and A Prairie Grove (1938). The
Peatties helped to introduce ideas about tallgrass prairie restoration
that have influenced Midwestern conservationists ever since--but at the
time, in the Dustbowl years, regenerating plant cover to hold topsoil,
rather than protecting even endangered wildlife, was the first concern
of most ecologists. The Grove was at risk of being sold for
development by 1973, when a local activist group calling themselves the
Frog & Fern Ladies rallied to save it. The Glenview Park District
bought The Grove in 1976. A National Historic Landmark, The Grove
today features an extensive network of boardwalks through wetlands, plus
a wildlife center exhibiting tanks of catfish, gar, turtles, and a variety
of snakes, some of whom are reared for release into suitable wild habitat. The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service and Chicago Wilderness Inc. have worked since 1999 to purge non-native species from The Grove, including European buckthorn, among the most cursed "invasive" plants in North America. Ironically, Dr. John Kennicott reputedly introduced European buckthorn to the Midwest.--Merritt Clifton”
|