Interesting spring migration story.   --Marty

Sent: Friday, April 28, 2017 5:06 AM
To: Marty Schlabach <m...@cornell.edu>
Subject: Biodiversity Heritage Library

Biodiversity Heritage Library<http://blog.biodiversitylibrary.org/>

________________________________

Spring Migration Notes...By a 
Murderer<http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/biodiversitylibrary/yMJa/~3/xJLLw0Xr2lc/spring-migration-notesby-murderer.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email>

Posted: 27 Apr 2017 05:30 AM PDT
By Gretchen Rings
Reference & Interlibrary Loan Librarian
The Field Museum

On November 5, 1950, The Field Museum [the Chicago Museum of Natural History at 
the time] Curator of Mammalogy Colin Sanborn received an extraordinary letter, 
which began as follows:
Dear Colin,
I should like to make a rather unusual request of you. Some twenty-five years 
ago I gave the then Field Museum several specimens from my bird collection. 
Included among them was a habitat group of Kirtland's Warblers, consisting of 
the two adults and four nestlings in the nest, mounted by Ashley Hine...I know 
that the Museum used to have souvenir photograph postcards of many of its 
mounted groups on sale to the public. Could you find out for me whether such a 
photo was ever made of this Kirtland's Warbler group, and if so, let me know 
how I can get one?

It wasn't the request itself that was so unusual: individuals (or their 
descendants) frequently inquired about a specimen donated to the museum. It was 
the letter's author, in this case, that made it stand out: Nathan Leopold, Jr. 
Prior to becoming part of the infamous duo Leopold and Loeb, convicted for 
kidnapping and murdering Bobby Franks, a 14-year-old neighbor, Leopold had been 
a birder and ornithologist. Writing from prison in Joliet, Illinois, he hoped 
to receive a photograph of a group of specimens he'd donated as a very young 
man.

In addition to specimens from Loeb--The Field Museum also has a Cooper's hawk 
and a Praying Mantis--the Library owns one of only a couple of known extant 
copies of a booklet called Spring Migration Notes of the Chicago 
Area<http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/182895> that Leopold helped 
compile. He was just 15-years-old at the time the booklet was published.
[https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-yPIs5Mh19ZE/WP5lgh-XjBI/AAAAAAAAGw4/vr1GZWCi5rYmWNugEBDYnXI90sfwVU2vwCLcB/s400/springmigrationn00wats_0003.jpg]<https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-yPIs5Mh19ZE/WP5lgh-XjBI/AAAAAAAAGw4/vr1GZWCi5rYmWNugEBDYnXI90sfwVU2vwCLcB/s1600/springmigrationn00wats_0003.jpg>

Watson, James D, George Porter Lewis, and Nathan Freudenthal Leopold. 1920. 
Spring migration notes of the Chicago area. [Chicago]: [G.W. Lewis Pub. Co.]. 
http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/47497174. Digitized by the Field Museum 
of Natural History Library.


Joshua Engel, a research assistant in the Field Museum's Integrative Research 
Center writes, "This little booklet has so much history, it's hard to know even 
where to begin. Let's start with the fact that the first author, James D. 
Watson, is the father of one of the most famous scientists of the 20th century, 
also named James D. Watson<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Watson>, who 
along with Francis Crick is credited with the discovery of the structure of 
DNA. But that's the least of it. The third author is even more intriguing. A 
budding young ornithologist, Nathan 
Leopold<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leopold_and_Loeb> would spend the bulk of 
his adult life in prison for the murder of Bobby Franks, one of the most famous 
crimes of the 20th century."

James D. Watson the younger describes how his father met Leopold, "It was in 
Jackson Park in 1919 that Dad had met the extraordinarily talented but socially 
awkward sixteen-year-old University of Chicago student Nathan Leopold, who was 
equally obsessive about spotting rare birds. In June 1923, Leopold's wealthy 
father financed a birding expedition so Nathan and my dad could go to the jack 
pine barrens above Flint, Michigan, in search of the Kirtland warbler. In their 
pursuit of this rarest of all warblers, they were accompanied by their fellow 
Chicago ornithologists George Porter Lewis and Sidney Stein, and in addition by 
Nathan's boyhood friend Richard Loeb, whose family helped form the growing 
Sears, Roebuck store empire."

The Field Museum's copy of Spring Migration Notes of The Chicago 
Area<http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/182895>, published in 1920, is now 
stored in the Mary W. Runnells Rare Book 
Room<https://www.fieldmuseum.org/science/research/area/rare-book-room>. Because 
of its historical value, it was added to the Biodiversity Heritage 
Library<http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/>, including the type-written, 
hand-signed letter on page four from young Nathan Leopold to Ruthven Deane, a 
leading ornithologist of his time and a resident of Chicago, who eventually 
donated part of his collection of specimens to The Field Museum (as Leopold did 
when he went to jail). The cover of this copy even says "Compliments of the 
authors," presumably written by Leopold.
[https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-Q34qrnI8bDY/WP5qybNe0tI/AAAAAAAAGxI/-v2YCuX_kesg5XlHthIpbsZ6DbU9KmqzgCLcB/s400/springmigrationn00wats_0005.jpg]<https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-Q34qrnI8bDY/WP5qybNe0tI/AAAAAAAAGxI/-v2YCuX_kesg5XlHthIpbsZ6DbU9KmqzgCLcB/s1600/springmigrationn00wats_0005.jpg>

Watson, James D, George Porter Lewis, and Nathan Freudenthal Leopold. 1920. 
Spring migration notes of the Chicago area. [Chicago]: [G.W. Lewis Pub. Co.]. 
http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/47497172. Digitized by the Field Museum 
of Natural History Library.


Aside from the fascinating backstory, there's the actual information that the 
booklet contains, a priceless indication of what the birdlife of Chicago was 
like in the early part of the 20th century. At the time, many wetland birds 
that are now rare or altogether gone as breeding birds were still common, an 
indication of the destruction of wetlands in the Chicago area over the last 
century.  This includes birds like Black Tern (about which the authors say 
"Breeds commonly"), King Rail ("Common summer resident"), and Wilson's 
Phalarope ("Nests in the Calumet region").

On the other hand, grassland birds were already declining, with many formerly 
common birds becoming rare. For example, Greater Prairie-Chicken was "A 
formerly abundant permanent resident; now rather rare," Northern Bobwhite was 
"A formerly very common permanent resident, but now rather rare," and 
Loggerhead Shrike, which then was known as Migrant Shrike, was a "Fairly common 
summer resident." These days you have to go hundreds of miles from Chicago to 
find Loggerhead Shrike or a prairie-chicken.

Additionally, there are spring arrival dates for every species each year from 
1913-1920.

Colin Sanborn's reply to Leopold must have been disappointing. He writes on 20 
November 1950: "Your group of Kirtland's warblers were never photographed and 
in fact have never been on exhibition." Sanborn goes on to write about his own 
activities in a breezy, newsy tone, e.g., birding, giving talks to a local 
ornithological society, etc. In other words, no mention of the fact that the 
letter he's responding to is signed by infamous prisoner #9306-D.

Leopold spent 33 years in prison until his parole in 1958. Active in the 
Natural History Society of Puerto Rico, Leopold traveled throughout the island 
for birdwatching and in 1963 he published Checklist of Birds of Puerto Rico and 
the Virgin Islands. He died of natural causes in Puerto Rico in 1971 at the age 
of 66.

As for the Kirtland warblers--happily, they are making a comeback. According to 
Joshua Engel, "The species has made an incredible comeback, from a low of about 
200 singing males in the early 1970s to over 2000 today. It's likely to be 
removed from the endangered species list in the next few years."
[https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-QwhluBfZuQU/WP5rHWcsyVI/AAAAAAAAGxM/AKrmwQbxiSwy2e4EXfWSLG-Dkd0pzyMiACLcB/s400/IMG_0754.JPG]<https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-QwhluBfZuQU/WP5rHWcsyVI/AAAAAAAAGxM/AKrmwQbxiSwy2e4EXfWSLG-Dkd0pzyMiACLcB/s1600/IMG_0754.JPG>

Kirtland Warbler specimen, Field Museum Zoology collection. Photo Courtesy of 
Joshua Engel.


References
§ Engel, Joshua. (May 18, 2015). "History and birds come together: 'Spring 
Migration Notes' from 1920 and its famous authors." The Field Museum of Natural 
History, 
https://www.fieldmuseum.org/science/blog/history-and-birds-come-together-spring-migration-notes-1920-and-its-famous-authors
 (accessed December 16, 2016).
§ Swanson, Steven. 1997. Chicago Days: 150 Defining Moments in the Life of a 
Great City. Chicago: Cantigny First Division Foundation.
§ Watson. James D. 2007. Avoid Boring People: Lessons from a Life in Science. 
New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
§ Wikipedia contributors, "James Watson," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=James_Watson&oldid=755145717 
(accessed December 16, 2016).
§ Wikipedia contributors, "Leopold and Loeb," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Leopold_and_Loeb&oldid=754973757 
(accessed December 15, 2016).



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