<p class="caption2"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</SPAN></p>
<p class="caption2">The Pigeon Butcher's Defense</p>
<p class="caption3 pmb2">By E. T. Martin, from the "American Field,"<br/>
Chicago, January 25, 1879.</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>The preceding chapter by Prof. H. B. Roney in <i>American Field</i>, was
answered by E. T. Martin, a game dealer of Chicago, who afterwards issued
a pamphlet, the first page of which is herewith reproduced, and I make
quite extensive extracts from the body of the circular, which incidentally
advertises Martin as "the largest dealer in live pigeons for trap shooting
in the world, also a dealer in guns, glass balls, traps, nets, etc."</p>
<p>I call the reader's attention to the following:</p>
<p>In the table given of the shipments from Petoskey and Boyne Falls,
etc., during 1878, Martin estimates the number shipped alive from
Cheboygan as 89,730, yet H. T. Phillips of Detroit, shows from his
records that he alone shipped from that point 175,000 that year. So if
Martin's estimates are all as far wrong as this one, he should account for
a total shipment of over 2,000,000 pigeons.</p>
<p>In Martin's circular, he seems to take offense at some remarks Prof.
Roney has made in this article that reflect upon the character of these
netters, for Martin uses in quotation marks the following: "A reckless,
hard set of men, pirates, etc.," which seems to have some foundation in fact,
as Martin says: "In proof of the pigeons feeding squab indiscriminately,
I may mention the fact that one of the men in my employ this year, while
at the Shelby nesting in 1876 in one afternoon shot and killed six hen
pigeons that came to feed the one squab in the same nest." Further
comment is unnecessary.—W. B. M.</p>
</div>
<div class="dropcap">A</div>
<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">A</span> LITTLE after the middle of March a body
of birds began nesting some twelve miles north
of Petoskey, near Pickerel Lake. About April
8 another and larger body "set in" along Maple and
Indian Rivers, and Burt Lake, and near Cross Village,
there being in all some seven or eight distinct nestings,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</SPAN></span>
covering perhaps, of territory actually occupied by the
nesting, a tract some fifteen miles long and three of
average width, or forty-five square miles.</p>
<p>The principal catch was made from the Crooked
and Maple rivers nestings, and when the former
"broke," which was about May 25, the pigeoners
pulled up and left, many going home, and others to
the Boyne Falls nesting, some thirty miles south, which
"set in" at about the same time. This gave a duration of
two and one-third months to the Petoskey nesting proper,
though it is true that, feed being abundant, some very
few birds remained around, roosting for a little longer.</p>
<p>The Boyne Falls nesting lasted something over a
month and broke early in July; from this the catch was
very light. After that, the only catch was a few young
birds taken "on bait."</p>
<p>Besides these nestings, there was one further south
on the Manistee River, some twenty-six miles long by
five average width, or 130 square miles, in which the
birds hatched three times, and from which not a bird
was caught, as it was an impenetrable swamp, and the
putting of birds on the market would be attended with
such expense as to destroy the profit. There were also
one or two smaller ones, east of this one. These comprised
the Michigan nestings, in addition to which, at
Sheffield, Pa., there was fully as large a body, and
fully as large a catch as at the Crooked and Maple
nestings, the birds hatching there, I think, three times,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</SPAN></span>
each hatching taking four weeks, from the beginning of
nest building to the time the old birds leave the young.</p>
<p>It is true, however, that birds were shipped from
Petoskey the middle of August, but they were birds
belonging to me that I was holding there for a market,
my Chicago pens being full. Every bird of them had
been in my possession for a month previous, and many
for six weeks. So the actual pigeon business lasted not
five months, as Prof. Roney says, but about three; part
of which time the total catch was not fifty dozen per
day.</p>
<p class="center" style="letter-spacing:3em">* * * * *</p>
<p>They (Prof. Roney et al.) came to Petoskey with a
great flourish of trumpets, hired expensive livery rigs
to ride around the country in, made one or two arrests,
secured one conviction by default, were defeated in
every case that came to trial, had one of the party play
the rôle of "terrible example" in the trout case, and
then went home, and in the face of the fact that they
had eaten, or known of having been eaten, hundreds of
pigeons, and of the certainty that the report was false,
had published in the Saginaw paper a report that the
pigeons then being caught in Michigan were feeding on
poisoned berries, and the using them for food had
caused much sickness, and in one or two instances loss
of life.</p>
<p>This was not only published in the home papers, but
was telegraphed to New York, Boston, Chicago, St.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</SPAN></span>
Louis and Cincinnati, and marked copies of the notice
sent to the press of neighboring cities, the avowed object
being to cause such a decline in price as to force the
netters to quit. It was based on the idea that most of
them were men of small means, and that unless ready
market offered for their birds, they must give out. The
effect was to cause a drop in price of fifty cents a dozen
in New York and Boston in a single day, to cause the
price in Chicago to decline to twenty cents per dozen,
and to take the last cent out of the pockets of a hundred
netters, leaving many who became discouraged and had
to walk long distances to their homes, dependent on
chance for even a mouthful to eat. Many, though,
held out. Telegrams of denial were sent, and the market
in a week or two rallied somewhat, though it was a
month before prices in the East touched the same figure
as when the "poison-berry" telegrams were received.
During the week when prices were lowest I refused to
buy many dead birds offered me at five cents per dozen,
preferring to lend the netter money, or to advance it
on his next catch to be saved alive.</p>
<p>And, by the way, let me say that killing the pigeons
by pincers is an instantaneous and painless death, the
neck being broken by a single movement, and the fluttering
spoken of being the same seen in any bird shot
through the head, or with the head cut off. But had
the market remained unbroken, had this infamous poisoned
berry story never been started, no such net results
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</SPAN></span>
in way of profit would have been reached as Prof.
Roney says. Under very favorable circumstances, a
good netter in such a season as we had in 1878, would
make from $100 to $200, but by far the larger portion
would not reach $100 over expenses.</p>
<p>At the Crooked and Maple nestings day in and day
out the average catch was about twenty dozen per day to
each net and two men. These sold, except immediately
after the "poisoned berry story," at from twenty to
thirty cents per dozen head, at the net, or if the catcher
was saving alive, in which case his catch would be one-third
smaller, owing to the trouble of handling the live
birds, he would get from thirty-five to forty-five cents.</p>
<p>The principal object in saving them alive was that no
birds spoiled from warm weather, and at my pens close
by the nesting they would be received at any hour, while
to sell dead birds it was necessary to depend on some
chance buyer or to haul to Petoskey, fourteen miles distant.
At Boyne Falls prices were a little higher, say
twenty-five for dead and fifty cents for live, but the
average catch was not five dozen per day to each net.
There were exceptions both ways, which went of course
to make up the average, the most notable being that of
the 2,000 dozen caught by one party, not in ten days,
but in twenty, employing two nets and six men. This
I know, for I was at the net and saw part of the catching,
while Prof. Roney never got that far. This 2,000
dozen was shipped East and netted the catchers just
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</SPAN></span>
fifteen cents a dozen at the net, or $300 for twenty days'
work for six men and two nets, while on the other
hand, during the same time, many better catchers who
had not been lucky in location hadn't made enough to
pay for board. Names, locations, etc., can be furnished
if Prof. Roney desires.</p>
<p>The Professor then goes on to lament his failure
before our Emmett County jury. The reason why is
very simple, <i>he never proved his case</i>. This whole
pigeon trade was a perfect Godsend to a large portion
of Emmett County. The land outside of Petoskey is
taken up by homesteaders, who, between clearing their
land, scanty crops, poor soil, large families, and small
capital, are poorer than Job's turkey's prodigal son,
and in years past have had all they could do fighting
famine and cold, and but a year or so since all Michigan
was sending relief to keep them from starving, thousands
of dollars being contributed, and then most harrowing
tales being told of need and destitution.</p>
<p>The "pirates and bummers" left some $35,000 in
good greenbacks right among the most needy of these
people. Many were enabled to buy a team, others to
clear more land, more to increase their crops, and all
to lay in provisions and clothing to meet the bitter
winter we are now passing through, and this money did
more to open up Emmett County than years of ordinary
work. It put scores of honest, hard-working homesteaders
on their feet; it increased trade, and, if sent
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</SPAN></span>
by a special act of Providence, could not have done
more good. Such being the case, can any blame be
given an Emmett County jury if they required evidence
direct and to the point before convicting? And in no
case that came to trial was direct evidence given. So
the four true "sportsmen" there in behalf of justice and
humanity, had such a cold reception from all, that they
concluded strategy beat that kind of work all to death,
pulled up stakes and hurried home, and worked up the
poisoned berry business.</p>
<p class="center" style="letter-spacing:3em">* * * * *</p>
<p>Now, about the merciless slaughter. Prof. Roney
estimates 1,500,000 dead and 80,000 live birds as the
shipments, and then goes on to say that <i>one billion</i>
birds have been destroyed! What logic.</p>
<p>I have official figures before me, and they show that
the shipments from Petoskey and Boyne Falls were:</p>
<table summary="bird shipments">
<tr>
<td style="width:18em">Petoskey, dead, by express</td>
<td class="tdr">490,000</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Petoskey, alive, by express</td>
<td class="tdr">86,400</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Boyne Falls, dead</td>
<td class="tdr">47,100</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Boyne Falls, alive</td>
<td class="tdr">42,696</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Petoskey, dead, by boat, estimated</td>
<td class="tdr">110,000</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Petoskey, alive, by boat, estimated</td>
<td class="tdr">33,640</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Cheboygan, dead, by boat, estimated</td>
<td class="tdr">108,300</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Cheboygan, alive, by boat, estimated</td>
<td class="tdr">89,730</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Other points, dead and alive, estimated</td>
<td class="bdb tdr">100,000</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><span style="padding-left:4em;">Total</span></td>
<td class="tdr">1,107,866</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>This may be set down as accurate or nearly so, and
1,500,000 will cover the total destruction of birds by
net, gun and Indians. The total number of nesting
squabs taken by the Indians would not reach 100,000
and not over fifty barrels of these ever reached a market,
the Indians smoking the remainder for winter use. No
one knows how many birds 1,500,000 are until they
see them, and handle a few. As an illustration: To buy
and sell 125,000 birds in four months, it took myself,
two men and a boy all our time, working from daylight
until after dark every day.</p>
<p>I doubt if there were a billion birds in all the
Crooked and Maple nestings. I am certain that there
were not at any one time. I am also certain that more
than double as many young birds left those nestings
than all the birds caught, killed or destroyed. The
morning that the Crooked nesting broke, I was out at
daylight, and at the net to see and help one of my men
make a strike; for an hour and a half a continuous
body of birds half a mile wide and very thick was
going out; our strike was twenty-nine dozen, twenty-five
dozen young and four dozen old, about the same
proportion as the other catchers. This showed that of
the immense body over five-sixths were young birds,
barely old enough ones remaining to guide the body of
young, and this was out of the nesting from which the
bulk of the birds had been caught, where the destruction
had been the greatest. When it is considered that the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></span>
Manistee birds hatched three times unmolested, that
there was a body several times larger there, than at
the Crooked and Maple, and that many from each body
went further north entirely out of reach and nested
at least once, possibly twice again, some idea may be
formed of the immense addition to the army of pigeons
from the Michigan nestings of 1878. Many more
young birds left the Crooked River nesting alone, than
all, old or young, destroyed during the entire season's
pigeoning.</p>
<p>Prof. Roney's lament about the young dying when
deprived of the parent bird, and his addition to the
number "sacrificed to Mammon" from that source,
compares favorably with the poisoned berry story,
or the attack on Turner. Admitting that 1,500,000
birds were caught and killed, not more than half of
these would be old birds, some of which would not be
nesting, and from some of which the young had left
the nest. If for every one of the 750,000 old birds
caught and killed, the squab had died, this would make
a total slaughter of 2,250,000, or about one four hundred
and fiftieth of the number he says.</p>
<p>I don't believe Prof. Roney knows what a billion is.
However, there were not 750,000, no, nor 100,000
squabs killed by losing their parents. It is a well-proved
fact that the old bird coming in will stop and
feed any squab heard crying for food, that in this way
they look out for one another's young, and the orphans
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</SPAN></span>
or half-orphans are cared for. It is rare, however, for
both old birds to be caught or killed, since the toms
and hens when nesting always fly separately, and the
chance of both the parents of the squab falling a "victim
to Mammon," particularly in a large nesting, is small.
As proof of the pigeons feeding squabs indiscriminately,
I may mention that one of the men in my employ this
year, at the Shelby nesting in 1876, in one afternoon
shot and killed six hen pigeons that came to <i>feed</i> the
<i>one squab</i> in the <i>same nest</i>.</p>
<p class="center" style="letter-spacing:3em">* * * * *</p>
<p>Why, Prof. Roney, the catch went on all the same,
your party made no difference of note, but the weather
was rough and somewhat stormy; the birds didn't
"stool" well, and during the days mentioned the catch
was very small, hence the decrease in shipments. Now,
regarding the law, it is well enough as it is; one shotgun
near a nesting is more destructive than a dozen
nets; the report of the gun causes the birds to rise in
thousands, and, when repeated, to leave in a body,
regardless of nest or squab, and never to return; as an
example, may be mentioned, the Minnesota nesting of
1877, when the birds were driven entirely away.</p>
<p>The net is silent; its work occasions no alarm; it
makes no cripples, consequently it can be admitted
nearer to the nests than its more noisy partner. Protect
the pigeons entirely, and a law forbidding catching during
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</SPAN></span>
nesting time is equivalent to entire protection, and
you have northern Michigan overrun with a pest that
will destroy the farmer's seed as fast as sown, and when
harvest time approaches, pounce upon a wheat field
ready for the reaper and in an hour not leave even
enough for the gleaner. Their increase would be more
rapid, their stay longer, and in four years not only
would the law be repealed, but inducements to slaughter
would be held out to rid the State of the rapidly increasing
and destructive pests.</p>
<p>The pigeon never will be exterminated so long as
forests large enough for their nestings and mast enough
for their food remain.</p>
<p>In conclusion, the pigeons are as much an article of
commerce as wheat, corn, hogs, beeves, or sheep. It
is no more cruel to kill them for market by the thousand,
than it is to countenance the killing at the stock yards
in this or any other large commercial center. The paper
to-night shows that in six cities over four million hogs
have been killed since Nov. 1, 1878, or two and a
half months, a larger slaughter than, during the same
time, of pigeons at the nestings by nearly threefold.
Yet this is not "sacrificing to Mammon." A farmer
can market his poultry dead or alive at any time of
the year, and the slaughter, the country over, is larger
than that of pigeons, yet no one in the interest of "justice
and humanity" interferes.</p>
<p>The pigeon is migratory, it can care for itself. It
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</SPAN></span>
nests in the impenetrable wilds of Arkansas, the Indian
Territory, Canada and British America, as often as in
the land of civilization where it can be reached for
market. It is a source of profit to the poor, or pleasure
to the rich. Its benefits to the Emmett County homesteaders,
as felt through the cold of this winter alone,
are enough to compensate for evils even as black as our
Prof. Roney paints, and Emmett County is but a sample
of whatever location the birds may settle in.</p>
<p>Let the law, in regard to distance, stand as it is.
Enforce it against all alike; make no exceptions; let
the rule of supply and demand govern the catchings, and
you will have something better than all the professors
in Michigan suggest. Let the supply be so large that
prices are low and wages can't be made, and law or no
law, the catching will stop. But don't make a law that
will take bread out of the homesteader's mouth, and
work from hundreds of poor and honest men; no, not
even if the birds should be sacrificed, to a certain extent,
for man is above the beasts, and the "beasts of the field
and the birds of the air" are given unto him for his
benefit and his profit.</p>
<div id="fp104" class="figcenter" style="width: 629px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fp_104.png" width-obs="629" height-obs="493" alt="" />
<p class="fig_title">H. T. PHILLIPS' STORE</p>
<p class="fig_caption">A typical game store of the early 70's</p>
</div>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />