Here's some information about another person who worked on promoting 'birdless hats' Linda Wilson Manager, Audience Research and Evaluation John G. Shedd Aquarium 1200 S. Lake Shore Drive Chicago, IL 60605 PH (312) 692 3261 FAX (312) 939 8677 [log in to unmask] John F. Lacey, Iowa's (Almost) Forgotten Conservationist by Greg Beisker Father of American Conservation. This title could apply to many great early conservationists. Among them would be: Henry David Thoreau, John Muir, Gifford Pinchot, Theodore Roosevelt and Steve Mather. Each excelled in their own field of conservation. However, this title has also been bestowed upon the relatively unknown Major John F. Lacey, who was called superlative titles: "Father of Federal Conservation Legislation," "First Congressional Champion for Birds and Wildlife," and "Father of Federal Game Protection." Lacey served as U.S. Representative for Iowa's Sixth District for 16 years (1889-1891,1893-1907). As chairman of the House Public Lands committee for 12 years he helped usher in the turn-of-the-century conservation movement by authoring and sponsoring most of the early legislation affecting our national parks, forests, and wildlife. His environmental concern, legal know-how, and political savvy established him at the right man in the right place at the right time to do a great and lasting work for his fellow countrymen. While Lacey's first concern was for the care of wild birds, he also secured protective legislation for other wildlife, national forests, and national parks and monuments. He truly was a prominent brain child and actuator of the early conservation movement. In 1888 Lacey was first elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. While he received ridicule from his fellow Congressmen for his early concerns about wildlife protection, he soon silenced them by proving himself to be one of the ablest legislators in Washington. By 1907 when Lacey returned to private life, he had become recognized at THE Congressional authority on all conservation fronts. Lacey himself admitted that during his 12 year tenure as chairman of the Public Lands Committee very few pieces of conservation legislation passed Congress which he had not authored or at least rewritten. Theodore Roosevelt leaned heavily on Lacey during these years in pursuing his conservation policy. By this time, conservation issues had become an important and legitimate concern of the nation and congress could no longer consider them trivial or laughable. Lacey's conservation concerns were many and diverse. Those areas in which he expressed the greatest concern included bird protection, wildlife protection, establishment of federal wildlife sanctuaries, management and expansion of federal forest reserve system, management and expansion of the national park system, proper management of the rest of the public domain (unsettled federal lands), and preservation of antiquities (Indian ruins). The Lacey Bird Act of 1900 was the Major's first effort as far as bird protection was concerned. This act was an extension of interstate commerce regulation. It outlawed the interstate transport of game taken illegally according to state laws. Before this law went into effect, once illegally taken game was transported across state lines, both state and federal law enforcement officials became powerless to do anything to stop the lawbreakers. This law helped eliminate the huge, illegal portion of the game market enterprise. Many consider this law to be Lacey's greatest legislative victory. At the turn-of-the-century, it was fashionable for women to wear hats adorned with bird plumage and sometimes even entire birds. As grotesque as it may seem, this was the millinery fashion rage. Lacey tried to raise the conscience of women in that day towards conservation of the wild birds via a change in fashion. On May 12,1905 Lacey addressed the Iowa Federation of Women's Clubs in Waterloo, Iowa. After praising them for their many good deeds and thanking them for their support of forest preservation he then chided them. "In the preservation of our birds, the women of America were slow to act, but they are now doing a great part. We have a wireless telegraph, a crownless queen, a thornless cactus, a seedless orange, and a coreless apple. Let us now have a birdless hat!" His appeal was heard and the Federation went on to become one of Iowa's strongest conservation organizations in the 1910's and 1920's. Lacey was successful in initiating federal wildlife protection. He authored the Yellowstone National Park Protection Act in 1894. This act turned the park into the first national wildlife preserve in which all hunting and trapping was forbidden. He secured funding for the creation of two federal buffalo herds. The establishment of Witchita Mountain National Wildlife Refuge, the first Congressionally designated area of this type outside a national park, was largely Lacey's doing. Lacey was also responsible for several other wildlife protection measures and national park areas like Crater Lake, Yosemite, and Yellowstone National Parks. Forest protection and management was an area of much interest to Lacy. He helped draft the legislation which created the forest reserve program in 1891. If it weren't for Lacey, the entire program may have been scuttled in 1897. He was continually calling for the proper administration of the reserve system. The Major worked closely with Gifford Pinchot, the father of American forestry and the head of the Bureau of Forestry (predecessor of the U.S. Forest Service), in securing a workable federal forestry program. Lacey's record of conservation and human rights legislation marked him as a man of great vision, concern, and drive. Unfortunately, the esteem held for Lacey by political leaders in Washington and conservationists and sportsmen across the nation did not pervade his constituents back in Iowa. He had labeled himself a Standpat Republican, opposed to most economic and foreign trade reform measures being advocated by the increasingly popular Progressives. The voters of Iowa viewed him as being out of step with their wishes on "pocketbook" issues. Consequently they handed him a stunning defeat in 1906. While Iowans correctly identified Lacey with old fashion, reactionary economic policies, they largely failed to credit him for his monumental legislative work for conservation. The election loss did not stop Lacey's work for conservation reform. He concentrated his efforts on approval of a migratory bird law and expansion of the wildlife reserve system. As a member of the American League of Sportsmen Committee on Conservation, Lacey had a platform from which to "preach" his message. Lacey lived to see the enactment of the Weeks-McLean Migratory Bird Act. He even served on the National Advisory Council which formulated the regulations by which this act came to be enforced. The growth and management reforms of the wildlife reserve system came slowly until finally in 1934 the National Wildlife Refuge System Act was enacted. At last the nation had "caught up" to where Lacey had been 32 years earlier when he was proposing that all forest reserves have a wildlife reserve within them. The results of Major John F. Lacey's selfless dedication to conservation issues are still evident to us today in the form of national forests, national wildlife refuges, national monuments, migrating water fowl, and many other outdoor wonders. Return to INHF Homepage © Copyright 2003 Iowa Natural Heritage Foundation Comments? Suggestions? Email INHF Webmaster -----Original Message----- From: Rainey Tisdale [mailto:[log in to unmask]] Sent: Tuesday, June 10, 2003 12:48 PM Subject: Audubonnets We received a reference question from the National Audubon Society that we were not about to answer, but it's an interesting question so I wanted to pose it to the list. Apparently the Audubon Society was formed in Boston in 1896 when Harriet Lawrence Hemenway started a movement among her friends to stop wearing hats with bird feathers on them (they were highly fashionable at the time and birds were being killed for their feathers). The organizing going on in Boston caught on and women across the country started promoting milliners who sold birdless hats, lobbying for protective legislation, and working to change what was considered fashionable. Jenna Weissman Joselit relates this story in "A Perfect Fit: Clothes, Character and the Promise of America," although it may be in other books as well. The Audubon Society staffer who contacted us is looking for an "audubonnet," the term given to the non-feathered hats that the Audubon Society ladies encouraged milliners to make as an alternative. She thought we might have one since the movement started in Boston. Does anyone know of an institution that owns an audubonnet, or any other artifacts/ephemera (milliner ads?) related to the birdless hat movement? 1899 and 1900 would probably be the likeliest years for such hats, although inclusive dates would be 1896 to 1906ish. It may be that very few hats were actually labeled "audubonnet" in some way, even though there might be a number of birdless hats out there that were created in response to this movement--I just don't know for sure at this point. Thanks in advance for any help with this question. Rainey Tisdale Collections Manager The Bostonian Society 206 Washington Street Boston, MA 02109-1773 617-720-1713 x24 617-720-3289 Fax For more information about The Bostonian Society, or to become a member, visit our website: www.bostonhistory.org ========================================================= Important Subscriber Information: The Museum-L FAQ file is located at http://www.finalchapter.com/museum-l-faq/ . You may obtain detailed information about the listserv commands by sending a one line e-mail message to [log in to unmask] . The body of the message should read "help" (without the quotes). If you decide to leave Museum-L, please send a one line e-mail message to [log in to unmask] . 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