Ernest Harold Baynes

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"Ernest Harold Baynes entertaining a friendly chickadee", 1915

Ernest Harold Baynes (1868–1925) was an American

Teddy Roosevelt was honorary chairman. He was "the closest thing New England, and the world for that matter, will ever get to a real-life Doctor Dolittle; all sorts of New England birds and animals–foxes, wolves, chickadees, bears and bison were known to roam around and in and out of his house."[1]

Origins

He was born on 1 May 1868 at

Calcutta, West Bengal in India, a son of John Baynes a British inventor, by his wife Helen Augusta Nowill Baynes In the 1870s, after his father had failed at running a textiles company in Calcutta, the family moved to New York, where John set up the Baynes Tracery and Mosaic Co., which produced etched memorial tablets, among other products. He patented manufacturing processes with the tastemaker Lockwood de Forest, and Baynes tablets survive at Grace Church in Newark, the Battell Chapel and Norfolk Library in Norfolk, Connecticut, and the Cleveland Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument. John claimed (without proof) to have invented "photo-modeling", a technique for using light to carve sculpture.[2] Ernest's siblings included Lillian Baynes Griffin
, a British-born American journalist and photographer, and John R. Baynes, a metal etcher and photographer.

Career

He received his early education in England and aged 11 moved with his parents to Bronx Park, New York. He graduated as valedictorian of his high school class and subsequently attended the College of the City of New York.[1] In the 1890s he started publishing articles on nature and wildlife in various newspapers. "Without the constraints of scholarly publishing, he became a wildlife showman through his articles and appearances."[1]

Bison conservation

Baynes driving his bison team of War Whoop and Tomahawk, 1907

In 1904 he was appointed conservator of the Corbin Park buffalo reserve on the edge of the Blue Mountain Forest in New Hampshire, by Austin Corbin Jr. (d.1938), whose father the banker and railroad entrepreneur Austin Corbin (1827-1896) had established it.[1] Known as the "Blue Mountain Forest Association", it was a limited membership proprietary hunting club, the park of which comprised 26,000 acres (110 km2) in the towns of Cornish, Croydon, Grantham, Newport and Plainfield. Corbin Sr. imported bison from Oklahoma, Montana, Wyoming, Manitoba and Texas and donated bison to other American zoos and preserves. He also imported exotic species from Europe and Canada, including wild boar from the Black Forest of Germany.[3] Having been purchased by a syndicate of hunters in 1944, the park survives in 2020, surrounded by a 26-mile-long (42 km) chain-link fence, as a non-profit organization[4] with a membership of about 30 wealthy game hunters,[5] and is referred to as the "millionaires hunt club", said to be "the most exclusive game preserve in the United States". The herd of bison, however, was destroyed in the 1940s following an outbreak of brucellosis,[3] and the main species preserved and hunted are elk and boar.[4]

From a natural level of 60 million in America, the bison population had been reduced by human activity to just 1,000 by the 1890s, and in 1904 160 of these animals lived within Corbin Park. In about 1906 Baynes conducted a survey into surviving numbers of American bison, and found that 2,039 existed, 325 in the wild (25 in the USA, 300 in Canada), and 1,714 in captivity (1,109 in the USA, 175 in Canada and 130 in Europe, 300 elsewhere).[6] After 15 years of work and campaigning by Baynes, the national bison herd had increased to 20,000. He was famous for his tame bison and for driving around the park in a carriage pulled by a pair of bison War Whoop and Tomahawk, trained by him in an effort to promote the usefulness of the breed as draught animals. Baynes commented, "Of all the works of the late Mr. Austin Corbin, the preservation of that herd of bison was the one that would earn his country's deepest gratitude. His experiment led to the founding of the American Bison Society and was connected, directly or otherwise, with the formation of some of our national parks."[3]

Bird conservation

"Luncheon for Ernest Harold Baynes and a chickadee", 1905 photograph by Louise Birt Baynes

He campaigned against wild birds being killed for their plumage. In 1913 he established one of the earliest bird sanctuaries (the Meriden Bird Club) at his home at

Underwood Tariff bill then being debated in Congress. The play was performed across the country and helped to fuel the bird-protection movement developing in the 1910s.[1]

Vivisection

Baynes investigated vivisection and the claims of anti-vivisectionists.[8] He visited laboratories where experiments were carried out and came to the unexpected conclusion that little pain had been inflicted on the animals which he believed was insignificant in comparison to the relief from pain the research had given humans.[8]

He authored the article "The Truth about Vivisection" for the Woman's Home Companion in July, 1921. In this article, Baynes supported vivisection and critiqued the arguments of anti-vivisectionists.[8] Baynes publicly declared himself a supporter of vivisection which caused great controversy. He was attacked by anti-vivisection organizations as a fake humanitarian and a supporter of animal cruelty.[8] Baynes received much abusive mail from a threatening nature. Walter Hadwen for the American Anti-Vivisection Society wrote a rebuttal to Baynes' article, stating it was filled with misinformation.[9] However, Baynes received support from W. W. Keen, Henry Cantwell Wallace, Frederic Augustus Lucas and many other academics and doctors.[8]

Baynes defended vivisection for developing methods of disease prevention.[8] In 1923, he authored a pamphlet Vivisection and Modern Miracles.

Death

He died aged 56 on January 21, 1925, at his home "Sunset Ridge",[1] Meriden, Sullivan County, New Hampshire, US. His ashes were scattered on Croydon Mountain near his home, which event is commemorated on a local monument inscribed: Here were scattered the ashes of Ernest Harold Baynes, lover of animals and men, and loved of them. May 1, 1868, January 21, 1925.[1]

In Popular Culture

Earnest Harold Baynes appears in Annie Hartnett's novel, Unlikely Animals[10]. Also going by Harold, he appears as a ghost to the protagonist Emma Starling's father, Clive. His writings depicting relationships with the animals in his home also appear frequently, symbolizing a new section of the novel.

Selected publications

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "The Birds Best Friend: How Ernest Baynes Saved the Animals". New England Historical Society. August 29, 2013. Retrieved September 4, 2020.
  2. ^ "Engraving by Light". The Pittsburg Post. August 1, 1897. p. 18 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ a b c Mary T. Kronenwetter, "Corbin's 'Animal Garden'", Eastman Living online magazine (2011)
  4. ^ a b Outsideinradio.org, "Episode 27: Millionaires' Hunt Club" (December 29, 2016)
  5. ^ Brooks, David (January 13, 2020). "Lawmaker wants members of huge, private hunting club to buy hunting licenses, just like everybody else". Concord Monitor.
  6. ^ The Kansas City March 3, 1908, Preserving the American Bison — Ernest Harold Baynes Assumes the Self-Appointed Task of Rounding Up and Preserving All the Buffaloes Now in Existence, the Total Number of Which is 2,039; of These 325 Being Wild – Three Hundred of the Wild Ones Are in Canada – How he "Broke" Two of Them to Harness
  7. ^ The Audubon annual bulletin. Birds; Birds. Illinois Audubon Society 31
  8. ^ a b c d e f Raymond, Gorges. (1928). Ernest Harold Baynes: Naturalist and Crusader. Houghton Mifflin Company. pp. 194-223
  9. ^ Hadwen, Walter. (1921). "The Truth about Vivisection": A Reply to an Article by Ernest Harold Baynes Which Appeared in the "Woman's Home Companion" of July, 1921. The American Anti-Vivisection Society.
  10. OCLC 1336184838, retrieved February 18, 2023 {{citation}}: |last= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link
    )

Further reading