In March 1903, President Theodore Roosevelt declared Pelican Island in Florida "a preserve and breeding ground for native birds." That was the first federally protected area for birds. By 2003 this had grown to more than 540 wildlife refuges comprising 4% of US lands - 95 million acres. That initial designation was not without a backlash. It was done when bird feathers were the height of women's fashion, even to stuffed hummingbirds as an adornment for hats. The "plumers" (those who killed the birds by the thousands for their feathers) and the milliners were certainly among those who were most unhappy, but Roosevelt persevered in doing what he knew was right.
An appendix in Douglas Brinkley's The Wilderness Warrior lists accomplishments during hiTheodore Roosevelt's eight years as president. There were 150 national forests created or enlarged; 51 federal bird reservations; 4 national game preserves; 6 national parks; and 18 national monuments. Curiously, none of these was in a great circle from Maine to Georgia across to Arkansas, up to Iowa and back east to Ohio. Two national forests in Arkansas were the one exception. Nearly everything was in Florida or well west of the Mississippi River. I found no explanation of why this is the case.
Roosevelt drew a clear distinction between hunting game and pets. He believed all creatures felt pain so that abusive treatment of any animal was anathema to him. At the same time, he was an ardent hunter who believed, drawing on Darwin, that the natural world was violent. If wild animals killed one another, then an efficient death by hunting was actually a humane way to end their lives.
Roosevelt seems to have been bred and born to be a naturalist. His mother's tales of growing up in the antebellum South replete with "Georgia red clay, black bears, and beige panthers" led to a life-long obsession with natural history, especially birds. By age nine he was writing his father asking him to find certain plants that were hard to find. His father, a successful businessman and founder of the American Museum of Natural History, encouraged all his children to study the natural world. None took it to the lengths that Roosevelt did throughout his life. Even as President he would burst into a Cabinet meeting excitedly exclaiming that a certain bird had appeared that morning on the lawn long before it should have. He never lost the child-like wonder that comes with continually learning something new.
Exhaustive, exhilarating, entertaining, enlightening. Massively researched, The Wilderness Warrior is well suited for an audience with a particular interest in conservation and all that encompasses as its focus is rather narrow, despite the 940 pages. If we are to believe contemporaneous accounts about Roosevelt's voracious reading and retention, he could have roared through this book in a couple of evenings and been able to quote long passages from it. For the modern reader, this is a biography to be read slowly and savored in small segments.



