William T. HornawayHornaday Medal

 Biography of William T. Hornaday

By David L. Eby
Scouting Historian and Researcher
 
William T. Hornaday was born in Plainfield, Indiana on December 1, 1854. He attended Oskaloosa College in Iowa and Iowa State College in Ames, Iowa then became associated with Wards National Science Foundation in Rochester, N.Y in 1873. In 1874 he made his first collecting expedition for Wards to the Bahamas, Cuba and Florida. In 1876 he spent six months on the West Indies and South America and a short time later made a two-year tour of exploring and collecting for Wards in the Jungles of Ceylon, Malaya and Borneo. He married Josephine Chamberlain of Battle Creek, Michigan in 1879. In 1880, Dr. Hornaday founded the National Society of American Taxidermists and in 1882 was named the Chief Taxidermist of the National Museum (the Smithsonian), a position he held until 1890. Two years before he left he persuaded the museum to establish a living animals department and was so successful as the curator that the National Zoological Garden was established in Washington, D.C. (now called the National Zoo). He resigned when his original plans for the Zoo were changed. He left his zoological career at that point for a six-year stint as a businessman. He moved to Buffalo, N.Y. in 1890 where he started and ran a real estate business for six years. During those six years in Buffalo, N.Y., he served as a Trustee for the Buffalo Museum of Science. In 1896 he returned to his zoological career and became the first director of the New York Zoological Garden (the Bronx Zoo), which, under his supervision, became the largest and finest zoo in the world. He remained in that position for thirty years, retiring in 1926 at age 72. The New York Zoological Society is now known as the Wildlife Conservation Society (since 1994)

William T. Hornaday revolutionized how museums displayed wildlife exhibits. Before he came along they were simply mounted and placed on a board. He created and showed life like displays of wildlife in their natural settings. The first time he did this with monkeys it created a sensation. Surprisingly, Dr. Hornaday was at one time a big game hunter. He established the National Collection of Horns and Heads at the Bronx Zoo when it appeared big game animals would become extinct. That collection is now owned by the Boone & Crockett Club and is on display at the Buffalo Bill Historical Center in Cody, Wyoming. The original building that housed the collection at the Bronx Zoo still exists and still has the name engraved in its stonework. Dr. Hornaday is widely credited with saving the American bison and the Alaskan fur seal from extinction. He also played a large part in ending the use of feathers in women's hats. This alone saved millions of birds from slaughter.

Originally conceived in 1911, William Hornaday in 1913 formally created the Permanent Wild Life Protection Fund (P.W.L.P.F.), whose purpose was to promote through legislation and other means, more protection for wildlife around the world. The Fund was a stand alone organization and not an extension of some other group. It was essentially a war chest to combat anti wildlife forces. Dr. Hornaday decided that the Fund needed monies in the amount of $100,000.00 to be fully endowed and have the ability to achieve its objectives. The goal of $100,000.00 in funding to endow the P.W.L.P.F. was reached in November, 1915. The Fund had three Trustees of whom two were bankers with Dr. Hornaday serving as the third Trustee. Dr. Hornaday had complete control over how it was used and spent. The list of donors to the Fund is somewhat surprising. The largest donor by far ($25,000.00) and also the very first recipient of the Wildlife Protection Gold Medal was Mrs. (Russell) Margaret Olivia Sage. That first Gold Medal was awarded to Mrs. Sage on June 29, 1917 along with a certificate and the first copy of the Second Biennial Statement of the Fund, which was a thick hardbound book written by Dr. Hornaday. She had inherited approximately $63 million in 1900 when her husband died and she became one of the great philanthropists of the early 1900's. In 1912 she had also purchased the massive 76,000-acre Marsh Island in the Gulf of Mexico and later donated it to the State of Louisiana as a bird sanctuary as which, it remains. The next highest donation to the P.W.L.P.F. was $6,000 by George Eastman (of Eastman Kodak). There were eight donors of $5,000 each that included Henry Ford and Andrew Carnegie. National Scouter Mortimer Schiff also donated at the $1,000 level to the Fund. When William T. Hornaday died on March 6, 1937 at age 82, the assets of the Permanent Wild Life Protection Fund was bequeathed to the New York Zoological Society and became the beginning of their conservation endowment which was exactly what its original bylaws stated should happen when the P.W.L.P.F. was created. The New York Zoological Society continued to sponsor the BSA awards for about 35 years, presumably through the endowment.

The total amount of contributions received in 1912 by the National Council, BSA was $36,326.06 which kept the fledgling organization afloat financially. Of this amount, five people donated $29,300 which represented 81% of the total received. 361 other people and Scout troops donated the remainder. Those five donors were Mortimer Schiff who gave $4,800.00, George D. Pratt who gave $5,500.00 (he was the first treasurer of the BSA), John D. Rockefeller Jr. who gave $6,000.00 and Andrew Carnegie who also gave $6,000.00. The fifth and the largest donor to the BSA in 1912 was Margaret Olivia Sage who gave $7,000.00 or nearly 20% of the total.

In 1914 the P.W.L.P.F. Trustees developed the idea of a gold “Wild Life Protection Medal”, to present to individuals who had "rendered conspicuous services to the cause of wild life". (In 1914 “Wild Life” was two words and not one as it is today) In the 1913-14 Annual Statement of the P.W.L.P.F. published in March 1915, it was announced that the Fund was creating a special medal and that the first thought was to offer it to the BSA but the Trustees instead decided to make it available around the world. It was also mentioned that the medal was still in the design stage at that point. The design of the badge or top part of the eventual medal was pictured on the cover of the 1913-1914 Annual Statement. It was the logo of the Fund throughout its existence. The Trustees of the P.W.L.P.F. made the medals (and later the badges) available to three separate other organizations besides the P.W.L.P.F. itself. The French National League for the Protection of Birds in France, the Peoples Home Journal Magazine for a reader’s campaign starting in 1918 and the Boy Scouts of America for its members. All used the same P.W.L.P.F. medal, thus there were four different groups giving out the same awards. The Fund also had a certificate that was an “Honorable Mention” type award, although it is not known to have been used within the Boy Scouts program. The BSA awards without exception had the recipients names inscribed on the back of the award. None of them are known to have been awarded without the inscription. "The Trustees of the Fund formally offered to makes its awards available to the Boy Scouts of America and proposed that the Courts of Honor of the Scouts should themselves designate the Scouts to whom medals and gold badges should be awarded". Again, the medals were not created solely as a Boy Scout awards program and the early medals were not formally called the "Hornaday Award" (not until after his death in 1937). Among the early non-Scout recipients were naturalist Aldo Leopold (1917) and author Thornton Burgess (1919) who both received the medal directly from the P.W.L.P.F. It is unknown if the non-BSA awards programs continued on after the death of Dr. Hornaday although in all likelihood they did not. At that point (in 1938) the P.W.L.P.F awards were formally renamed the Hornaday Awards and likely became a BSA only program as the Permanent Wild Life Protection Fund no longer existed. In 1952 the medals and badges were redesigned and still use that same basic design today. In the 1950’s and 1960’s there was just a single gold medal and a gold badge that was awarded. This was later expanded into the multiple award system in use today.

Some of the collectors of Scouting memorabilia are aware of the Hornaday Awards, or at least the ones that has been around since 1952. Many are unaware of the original design Type I Hornaday Gold Medal and Gold Badge. Some collectors refer to the early medal as the "World Wildlife Federation Medal" which is a name it was never called during its years of existence. According to a fourteen page history of the awards that Dr. Hornaday himself wrote in 1931, between 1915 and 1931, fifteen of these gold medals were awarded to individuals including just three to members of Scouting and the others to individuals outside of Scouting. A total of thirty Gold Badges were awarded during that same time period according to Dr. Hornaday's records with twenty three of them being members of the BSA. The Scouting recipient's gold medals were awarded through the National Court of Honor and were referred to by the BSA as the "Wild Life Protection Medal" through 1937. According to National BSA information from 1938, after Dr. Hornaday's death (in 1937), the awards were renamed the Hornaday Medals and Badges in his honor. The only difference between the pre-1938 BSA awarded Wild Life Protection Gold Medals and Badges and the post-1938 BSA awarded Hornaday Gold Medals and Badges is the inscription on the back of both awards. They remained identical otherwise.

In the 1922 BSA Annual Report it is stated “A (BSA) committee ...was appointed to revise the requirements for this medal, which had seemed perhaps not entirely appropriate for boy service". The 1921 Annual Report stated "this revision has been thought advisable as Dr. Hornaday believes that the requirements are too difficult for boys to meet." They apparently were quite high initially in Dr. Hornaday's estimation and since seven years went by before the first medal was awarded to a member of Scouting, he was probably correct. Even then it went to an adult. The P.W.L.P.F. Gold Medal was presented for “DISTINGUISHED” Service to Wild Life and the P.W.L.P.F. Gold Badge was presented for “VALUABLE” Service. In 1922 the P.W.L.P.F. withdrew the Gold Medal from BSA consideration for boy members and made it available only to scoutmasters and other adults in Scouting.

The first Wildlife Protection Gold Medal awarded to a member of the BSA was in 1922 to Scoutmaster Harry (or Henry) Hall of Carbondale, PA. Mr. Hall, an adult, received the Gold Medal for twenty years of service to wild life. That same year, the first gold Honor Badge awards were established (and presented) which was known as the “Honor Badge for Distinguished Services To Wild Life” in Dr. Hornaday’s 1931 history. The Type I BSA Honor Badges were awarded to adults as well as boys. The badge was literally the top part of the Gold Medal (minus the ribbon and medallion) with an additional oval disk in the design that had "For Services To Wild Life" on it. They were cast as one piece and were not two pieces soldered together. They had a reddish glaze material on the front in the oval area. Three badges were awarded to Scouts in Sulfur Springs, Texas and Pittsburgh, PA that first year (1922). The pre 1937 badges state on the back “Permanent Wild Life Protection Fund” with the individuals name engraved on the back while the post 1937 badges say “Hornaday Award presented by the Boy Scouts of America to:” with the individual’s name engraved on it. The fronts are identical and both types were cast with wording into each badge.

While the design of the medal remained the same through 1950, the Annual Reports indicate that there were only four Type I named “Hornaday Medals” awarded by the BSA, as they were not formally named as such until 1938. The first named Hornaday Medal was awarded in 1941. (None were awarded in 1938, 1939 or 1940) Only two more were awarded after that including years 1943 and 1949. The 1945 Annual Report states that a medal was awarded that year however it was the badge and not the medal that was presented. I tracked down the 1945 recipient and discovered that. From 1922 though 1949 there was never more than one medal awarded in a given year and none awarded in most years. The last year the Type I BSA Honor Badges were awarded was in 1950 when five were presented. In 1951 the BSA awarded no medals or badges (none were listed anyway) but the first BSA Unit Hornaday Award was presented to Troop 16 in Bristol, Virginia. In 1952 the newly designed Type II BSA Hornaday Medals and Badges were awarded for the first time in the current design. Seven Type II medals and 17 Type II badges were awarded in 1952. Of the eight Type I Gold Medals awarded within the BSA, the first five were presented as "Wildlife Protection Medals" by the National Court of Honor and just the last three as "Hornaday Medals". The 1943 specimen came inscribed on the back as “Hornaday Award” as did the 1941 medal. The 1949 medal only had the recipients name engraved and not “Hornaday Award”. In the 1970's the current awards system was established with partial funding being provided at that time by the DuPont Company.

In the second bi-annual Statement of the Permanent Wild Life Protection Fund 1915-1916, (authored by W.T. Hornaday) which was published as a thick hardcover book with only 100 being printed, it states the Fund paid $172.50 for medals during that two-year period. How many were purchased is not disclosed. There are some incredibly tiny letters and numbers stamped under the hallmark on the 1943 medal. After scanning and magnifying them many times, they read “1/510KGF”. A local jeweler informed me that it means, “one fifth, 10 karat gold filled”. What that means in English is that particular medal is not solid gold as I thought but has very little true gold content although it does have some. It is a step above gold plated but not much more. Dr. Hornaday was in contact with the designer of the medal in 1915 via letters back and forth. His name was H. Newman and he was a jeweler in New York City. Mr. Newman created a magnificent medal and his hallmark is on the reverse side of the early medals, a shield with an “N” inside the shield. The original medals awarded in 1917 cost $65.00 each which given the price of gold back then leads me to believe they were gold at that point in time. The cost of the die from which all the medals were cast was created for a cost of $100.00. The medals were cast each year as they were needed. You have to look closely but in the design of the Type I medal there is a rifle lying on the ground under the feet of the deer. Symbolic I presume of Hornaday’s hopeful victory of saving wildlife from human slaughter.

Some of the other non-Scouts that received the early medal were two Presidents of Mexico. Probably one of the more extraordinary recipients of the Wild Life Protection Gold Medal was Lenhardt E. Bauer of Terre Haute, Indiana who received the gold medal in 1920. His story is mentioned in the 1922 National BSA Annual Report as well as the 1920’s edition BSA Scout Handbook even though he was not a Boy Scout. Curiously he is not listed on Hornaday's list of recipients but may have received it through the Peoples Home Journal magazine campaign. He created 266 private wildlife sanctuaries by convincing the owners of farms and other lands of the need and got written pledges from them to dedicate their land for wildlife preservation. The reason he was not a Boy Scout was that he was not old enough to join. He was nine or possibly ten years old when he was awarded the Wild Life Protection Medal. He was born in 1910 and received his medal in 1920. Lenhardt lost his father at age 13 and worked many jobs to help his family. He grew up to be a lawyer and was a state legislator by age 22. He was admitted to the State Bar one year before he graduated from college. A catastrophic fire later in life apparently destroyed his medal and many other personal items according to his son.

There was a sample medal made for Dr. Hornaday in 1916 by Newman Jewelers which he kept throughout his life. That medal is in the Hornaday collection at the Library of Congress. Margaret Sage’s 1917 medal is part of the Sage Collection at the Rockefeller Archives. The 1941 Hornaday Medal turned up in California in a junk shop in 2002. It was purchased for about $8. I tracked down the 1943 and 1949 medals as well as the 1945 award. They are now all in museums or private collections. The original die was altered for the 1949 medal with the PWLPF letters being removed from the front and the Newman hallmark being removed from the reverse side, hence there are two distinct variations of the original Type I Hornaday medal. There is a twin to the 1949 medal that exists in a private collection although it doesn’t appear that it was ever awarded to anyone. With that one included, there are four of the post 1938 Hornaday Type I Medals that exist and all are accounted for. The 1943 medal was donated to the Miakonda Scouting Museum in Toledo, Ohio and is on display there. The recipient, Lou Klewer, is a Toledo Scouting legend. He was the first 70 year Scouting veteran in BSA history and was one of the original members of the Tribe of Gimogash in Toledo.

A sincere thank you is extended to Steve Johnson of the Bronx Zoo library who was a tremendous help. Also thanks to the Miakonda Scouting Museum for award scans, to Paul Myers Jr., to the archives and library of the Bronx Zoo, the Library of Congress and to the Rockefeller Archive Center for information used in this article. A thank you is extended to Ruth Crocker, author of “Splendid Donation: A Life of Margaret Olivia Sage” (Indiana 2003) and to Baltimore collector Paul Kramer who happens to be one of the initial seven 1952 recipients of the Type II Hornaday Medal as well as a longtime collector of Hornaday memorabilia. Additional information was drawn from various sources including national BSA Annual Reports from 1911-1980 and unpublished Hornaday letters. In addition, the very early annual statements of the Permanent Wild Life Protection Fund were referenced.

The BSA ended the Hornaday Awards program on October 12, 2020 and they created a new program called the “BSA Distinguished Conservation Service Awards” to replace it.


Written By David L. Eby

P.W.L.P.F. Hornaday Awards History Time Line
1911 - 2002
By David L. Eby

1911 - William T. Hornaday informally conceives the idea of an independent endowment fund to supply monies to finance ongoing battles against big business and others for the protection of wild life around the world.

1913 - William T. Hornaday formally creates the Permanent Wild Life Protection Fund and decides that it will take no less that $100,000.00 to fully endow the fund. It has three trustees of which two are bankers and William T. Hornaday as the third. Dr. Hornaday is referred to as the “Campaigning Trustee”. All donors of $1,000.00 or more are referred to as “Founders”. Dr. Hornaday has total control on how the funds are used.

1914 - Dr. Hornaday sends a proposal to the Boy Scouts of America offering to provide them with a medal for members who provide “distinguished service” for the protection of wild life.
The BSA itself will select its recipients through its Courts of Honor. It will be an award of the P.W.L.P.F. and not a BSA ere- created program The Badges and Awards committee of the BSA begins an extensive process to consider the offer.

1915 -The P.W.L.P.F. Wild Life Protection gold medal is formally created. The Badges and Awards Committee of the BSA approve and accept the P.W.L.P.F. 's offer. A New York jeweler named J. Newman is commissioned by the P.W.L.P.F. to create the medal and work begins. The Biennial Statement of the Permanent Wild Life Protection Fund 1913-1914 is published in March 1915 and mentions the awards program and that although originally conceived with the BSA in mind, it will be made available around the world to promote the protection of wild life. It is also stated that the medal is in the design stage at that time. The goal of $100,000.00 in funding to endow the P. W.L.P.F. is reached.

1917 - The first P.W.L.P.F. “Wildlife Protection Medal” is pre-presented on June 29.1917 to Margaret Olivia Sage, who had purchased the 76,000 acre Marsh Island in the Gulf of Mexico for use as a bird sanctuary and who also had donated $25,000.00 to the P.W.L.P.F.. making her its largest donor. Three other medals are awarded in 1917 by the P.W.L.P.F., including the second one to naturalist Aldo Leopold. The other two medals are awarded to non members of the BSA.

1918- The P.W.L.P.F. makes it awards available to the Peoples Home Journal Magazine who through a national bird sanctuary campaign among its readers, awards four P.W.L.P.F. gold medals that year to four individuals. None of them are members of the
BSA.

1920 - Lcnhardt Bauer, a nine or ten year old boy in Terre Haute. Indiana, is awarded the P.W.L.P.F. Gold Medal. He is not a member of the BSA.

1921 - The BSA appoints a committee to revise its requirements for the P.W.L.P.F. Medal because Dr. Hornaday thinks the BSA requirements are to difficult for a boy to achieve. To date, no member of the BSA has been awarded the P.W.L.P.F. Gold Medal

1922 - The BSA awards for the first time a P.W.L.P.F. Gold Medal to one of its members. Scoutmaster Hany Hall of Cartoon- dale, Pennsylvania. The P.W.L.P.F. Gold Badge is created and awarded to four members of the BSA. It is also an award of the P. W.L.P.F. and is presented outside of Scouting as well.

1926 - The second P.W.L.P.F. medal to go to a member of the BSA is awarded. It goes *p an Eagle Scout who is not listed on the National BSA records but is on a list of recipients that Dr. Hornaday published in 1S31 when he wrote a history of the P.W. L.P.F awards program.
1929 - The third P.W.L.P.F. medal to go to a member of the BSA is awarded. It is presented to longtime Cincinnati, Ohio Scout Executive Arthur Roberts who also founded the Tribe of Ku-Ni-
I h camp social.

1931 - The fourth P.W.L.P.F. medal to go to a member of the BSA is awarded. Dr. Hornaday writes and publishes a history of the P.W.L.P.F. awards program.

1936 - The fifth and final P.W.L.P.F. medal to go to a member of the BSA is awarded.

1937 - Dr. William T. Hornaday dies on March 6, 1937 at Stanford, Connecticut. Per the original 1913 provisions of the P.W.L. PF . its assets are bequeathed to the New York Zoological Society to create their conservation endowment. The BSA begins negotiations with the N.Y.Z.S. to continue the P.W.L.P.F awards program perhaps as a memorial to Dr. Hornaday. No medals or badges are awarded in 1937.

1938 - It is announced that an agreement has been reached between the BSA and the N.Y.Z.S. to continue the awards program of the now defunct P.W.L.P.F.. It will now be sponsored by the N.Y.Z.S. and will henceforth be awarded as and called the "Hornaday Awards” in honor of the late Dr. Hornaday.

1941 - The very first official “Hornaday Medal” is awarded by the BSA. The remaining stock of the P.W.L.P.F. medals continues to be used with the with “Hornaday Award” being inscribed on the back of the medallion. It is presented to an Eagle Scout in Pennsylvania.

1943 - The second “Hornaday Medal” is awarded by the BSA. Of the four Type 1 Hornaday Medals that were awarded by the BSA, this is the only one that was awarded to an adult It is presented to a Scouter in Toledo, Ohio. His medal was donated to the Camp Miakonda Scouting Museum in Sylvania, Ohio where it remains on display.

1945 - The third “Hornaday Medal” is awarded by the BSA to a Scout in Martins Ferry. Ohio.

1949 - The fourth and final Type I “Hornaday Medal” is awarded by the BSA to an Eagle Scout in Rhode Island.

1950 - The last of the Type I Hornaday Badges are awarded. Six individual badges are presented.

1951 - No individual medals or badges are presented. The first Hornaday Unit Award is presented to a troop in Bristol, Virginia.

1952 - The totally redesigned (Type II) Hornaday Awards are presented for the first time. Seven medals are presented and fourteen badges The design remains unchanged as of 2002.

1966 - The 1966 BSA Annual Report to Congress includes a "Historical Highlights" timeline section that states under the year 1914, "the first William T. Hornaday gold medal for conservation of wildlife was presented". This statement, although totally incorrect- red, is quoted as fad for the next thirty six years. At some point the BSA also starts using an incorrect date of 1938 for Dr. Hornaday's- death instead of the correct date of March 6, 1937.

2020 -The BSA ended the Hornaday Awards program on October 12, 2020 and they created a new program called the “BSA Distinguished Conservation Service Awards” to replace it.

Inaccuracies & Facts About the Hornaday Awards
By David L. Eby

1. “The Hornaday Awards were created in 1914”. Fact: Dr. Hornaday in 1931 wrote and published a history about the Wild Life Protection Medal that was created by the Trustees of the Permanent Wild Life Protection Fund. In it he stated that the medal program or at least its concept was created in 1915. From 1915 through 1937 this medal was never called the William T. Hornaday Metal / Award either inside or outside the BSA and was never presented as the William T. Hornaday Medal during those years. It was awarded as and was called the “Wild Life Protection Medal” of the Permanent Wild Life Protection Fund at least until Dr. Hornaday's death on March 6, 1937. This same medal, which was awarded within the BSA, was renamed the Hornaday Medal in 1938 after Dr. Hornaday's death and the first one of these to be awarded within the BSA as the “Hornaday Medal” was bestowed in 1941. A total of four of these Type I BSA awarded Hornaday Medals were presented between 1941-1949 and were inscribed on the back as the “Hornaday Medal”. They were redesigned in 1952 and still bear the 1952 design today. Somewhere after the fact, someone' decided to rename the entire group of Wild Life Protection Medals that we're awarded by the BSA since 1922 as the “Hornaday Awards”. This is historically incorrect. Again, the term “Hornaday Medal” did not even exist until 1938 and was not awarded by the BSA until 1941. The annual reports of the Boy Scouts of America between 1920-1950 very clearly state this difference. If you examine the' actual BSA awards, they are' inscribed on the back exactly as they were awarded. The officially named Hornaday Awards date back to 1938 as far as the name goes and not 1914. It is unknown if the' non-BSA awards we're inscribed with the recipients name (or anything else).

 

2. The first Wild Life Protection Medals were awarded in 1918” - “The first Hornaday Medals were presented in 1914”. Fact: The P.W.L.P.F. medals did not even exist in 1914 and the second and third Wild Life Protection Medals to be awarded were presented in 1917 therefore the first one' could not have been presented in 1918. The second one was awarded to naturalist Aldo Leopold and the third to Dr. T. C. Stephens of Sioux City, Iowa. The very first Wild Life Protection medal was awarded to Mrs. Margaret Olivia Sage on June 29, 1917.1 have a copy of Hornaday's letter sent to Mrs. Sage that accompanied the' medal and it states point blank that she is the first recipient of the medal. The first member of the BSA to receive the Wild Life Protection Medal was presented it in 1922. There were a total of five Wild Life Protection Medals awarded by the BSA between 1922-1937 although BSA records only show four. (Dr. Hornaday's records list for 1926 a Scout that the BSA does not.) After 1937 upon Dr. Hornaday's death, this same medal then was renamed and awarded, as the “Hornaday Medal” by the BSA of which there was just four presented by the BSA between 1941-1949. This does not include the' Wild Life Protection Honor Badges (which were also later renamed for Dr. Hornaday), which were a separate and lesser award.

 

3. This awards program was created to recognize the relationship between conservation and Scouting. It was begun in 1914 by Dr. William T. Hornaday”. Fact: This is incorrect. The awards program was not created strictly for the BSA but simply made available to the BSA along with at least two other organizations besides the P.W.L.P.F. itself. Readers of the Peoples Home Journal Magazine were being awarded the medal four years before the BSA awarded its first medal. The 1914 date has already been discussed and the award program was not created solely by William T. Hornaday; at least according to Dr. Hornaday. The awards program was not about the relationship between conservation and Scouting whatsoever. The program was about promoting the protection of wild life and in particular about protecting birds.

 

4. “The Hornaday Awards are just for members of Scouting”. Fact: Today perhaps but the original medals of the Permanent Wild Life Protection Fund were awarded to people around the world as well as to members of Scouting in America. It was a very unique situation as it was not an official BSA award but was awarded within the BSA by the National Court of Honor. The key was the inscription on the back. Every medal and badge that can be verified as coming from one of the' BSA recipients had his name inscribed on the back. Men and women, girls and boys, as well as members of the BSA, were awarded the prestigious medal. Two Presidents of Mexico and people in France and Canada were presented the medal. So were some of the readers of the Peoples Home Journal magazine in the teens and 1920’s. The very first recipient of the medal was a woman who had nothing to do with Scouting, Mrs. Margaret Olivia Sage. The Trustees of the P.W.L.P.F awarded her the very first medal on June 29, 1917.

 

5. “Dr. Hornaday created the requirements for the awards presented by the BSA” Fact: Based on statements in national BSA documents of that time, this is incorrect. The BSA appears to have created the original requirements or guidelines for the medals awarded within Scouting. Dr. Hornaday thought that they (the BSA requirements) were too difficult for boys to achieve so the BSA put a committee together to revise them in 1921. This information is stated in BSA annual reports from 1921 and 1922.

 

6. “The Hornaday Award is for conservation of natural resources”. Fact: Not originally. It was all about wild life, in particular about birds. It was to promote the protection of wild life and wild life habitat and was awarded to people who did so.

 

7. “Since the inception of the award, fewer than 1200 medals have been awarded” Fact: There are no complete records of exactly how many Wild Life Protection Medals were awarded in total around the world. Dr. Hornaday published a list of recipients in 1931 but they do not totally concur with national BSA records as far as the BSA recipients are concerned although they are close. Each list has one or two names that the other does not. If you add the four official Type I Hornaday Medals awarded within the BSA to the number of Type II BSA medals presented since 1952 you can at least total the number of BSA Hornaday Medals awarded within the BSA.

 

8. “The awards program was created by Dr. Hornaday”. Fact: According to Dr. Hornaday in his 1931 history, “the Trustees of the Permanent Wild Life Protection Fund” created the medals program. There were three Trustees including Dr. Hornaday. While the other two Trustees were bankers it does not mean that they did not come up with or assist with the idea. If you read the history there are places where Dr. Hornaday takes credit for things he did and he clearly says that the Trustees came up with the program, not himself alone.

 

9. Hornaday Medals are highly prized. Fact: Yes they are although it is known that the recipient of one of the early BSA Wildlife Protection Badges melted it down to make a ring. Ouch!

 

10. “William T. Hornaday wrote over 100 books”. A list has been complied of what known books he authored. Some had printings of just 100 and are quite rare. The books he authored number just over twenty unless you want to count each of the annual printings of the New York Zoo guidebooks that were published each year for about 35 years. One source that I believe is reliable says that he wrote exactly twenty-six books, which I believe, is probably correct. I have compiled a list of those books and the Library of Congress supplied most of the titles. Dr. Hornaday did write magazine articles that probably number in the hundreds.

 

11. “William T. Hornaday died in 1938”. Fact: He died on March 6, 1937 in Stamford, Connecticut at age 82, ten years after he retired as Director of the New York Zoological Park. The 1938 date is quoted on every BSA Official and Unofficial Website in existence including the National BSA Website. Presumably it all started with the National BSA when they somehow got it wrong and everyone else followed their information assuming it was correct and it has been wrong ever since. The 1937 BSA Report to Congress had the right date and the Library of Congress has the right date.

 
Sources of information for the above Hornaday facts came from unpublished letters to and from William T. Hornaday courtesy of the archives of the Bronx Zoo, the archives of the Library of Congress and the Rockefeller Archive Center, from Margaret Sage historian, Ruth Crocker, author of "Splendid Donation: A Life of Margaret Olivia Sage"(Indiana, 2003), and from several rare books authored by William T. Hornaday. A pamphlet, “A Conspicuous National Service”, published by the People’s Home Journal, circa 1918 also provided valuable information. Numerous Annual BSA Reports to Congress from 1920-1952 were also used. A sincere thank you is extended to all and especially to Paul Myers Jr of Goshen, Indiana who is always an inspiration and to Steven Johnson of the Bronx Zoo Library whose assistance is beyond value. In addition a thank you is extended to Paul Kramer of Baltimore who is a long time collector of Hornaday Awards and memorabilia. -David L. Eby, Scouting Historian, Monroe, Michigan.
 
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Paul Myers Goshen, Indiana
gimogash@comcast.net