The story focuses on the former abundance of Passenger Pigeons in southwestern Michigan, particularly Berrien County, and their rapid decline in the last decades of the 19th century. I herewith reproduce their introduction to this piece, followed by a link to the audio file:
At one time, it was believed there were as many as five billion Passenger Pigeons in eastern North America. By the mid nineteenth century, their numbers began to decline sharply – killed by sportsman, commercial hunters and by farmers angry as the birds began raiding farm fields as forests disappeared to logging. Jon Wuepper, a naturalist and historian, documented the decline of the pigeon in southwest Michigan by scouring sixty-plus years of newspaper articles, beginning in the late 1830’s. He traced the decline through 1894, when the last bird was killed in the area. Wuepper tells the story.The audio file (.mp3) has a running time of about 8 minutes.
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