As a teen, Theodore D. Roosevelt, was in the outdoors watching birds about the expanses of the Adirondack Mountains wildness.
His efforts started when he was 14 in 1874, in the outdoors of the region in New York. A personal interest in natural history meant hiking about the heights to closely observe seasonal birds to denote their seasonal occurrence and little bits of their natural history.
The same focus occurred the subsequent summer season. And, after Roosevelt became a university student, he had a partner in this outdoor effort. They both eventually wrote about their observations. It was published for perpetuity and it a presidential tidbit of history.
Henry David Minot, a fellow student at Harvard University where Roosevelt arrived in 1876, helped compile the written record of bird life they had personally published in 1877. The catalogue was based on observations made in August 1874, August 1875 and from June 22 to July 9, in 1877, according to its text. The focal point was Saint Regis Lake.
The two young biologists hiked around a region of the Adirondack Mountains, in Franklin County, New York. Specimens were collected, though their fate is not apparent in the literature.
Their list of species - updated here to provide a modern common name - included a particular year, with some notes from the original article issued in 1879.
- Designated Common Name - Year Seen - Record Notes
- American Bittern - 1877 - bittern, Botaurus mugitans; occasional
- American Black Duck - 1877 - black duck; breeds, rare
- American Crow - 1877 - crow; comparatively uncommon
- American Goldfinch - 1877 - goldfinch; common; less so than in the White Mountains
- American Robin - 1877 - robin; moderately common
- American Three-toed Woodpecker - 1877 - banded-backed woodpecker, Picoides Americanus; much less common than the black-backed woodpecker
- American Woodcock - 1877 - woodcock; in July, one was shot
- Bald Eagle - 1877 - bald eagle; rare, but seen at least once
- Bank Swallow - 1877 - bank swallow; rather rare
- Barn Swallow - 1877 - barn swallow
- Barred Owl - 1875 - barred owl; one shot in August, 1875; probably not very rare
- Belted Kingfisher - 1877 - kingfisher
- Black-backed Woodpecker - 1877 - black-backed woodpecker, Picoides arcticus; common; second in numbers to the Hairy only
- Black-billed Cuckoo - 1877 - cuckoo, Coccygus erythropthalmus; twice heard
- Black-capped Chickadee - 1877 - chickadee, Parus atricapillus; rather scarce in June; abundant in August
- Black-throated Blue Warbler - 1877 - black-throated blue warbler; common
- Black-throated Green Warbler - 1877 - black-throated green warbler; common
- Blackburnian Warbler - 1877 - orange-throated warbler; common
- Blue Jay - 1877 - blue jay; moderately common
- Blue-headed Vireo - 1877 - solitary vireo; very common
- Bobolink - 1874 - bobolink; several seen, August 1874
- Boreal Chickadee - 1877 - Hudsonian chickadee; in small flocks at Bay Pond in the early part of August
- Broad-winged Hawk - 1874 - broad-winged hawk; one shot August 24th, 1874
- Brown Creeper - 1877 - brown creeper; common
- Brown-headed Cowbird - 1877 - cow-bird; rare
- Canada Goose - 1877 - Canada goose; in some parts quite plentiful
- Canada Warbler - 1877 - Canada flycatcher; less common than in the White Mountains
- Cedar Waxwing - 1877 - cedar-bird, Ampelis cedrorum; common
- Chimney Swift - 1877 - chimney swift; common, and often met with in the wilds
- Chipping Sparrow - 1877 - chipping sparrow
- Cliff Swallow - 1877 - cliff swallow; seen near Malone
- Common Grackle - 1877 - crow blackbird; neither rare nor common
- Common Loon - 1877 - loon, Colymbus torquatus; rare, but in 1870 common
- Common Nighthawk - 1877 - night hawk
- Common Raven - 1874 - raven; pair at Lake Farnsby, August 1874
- Common Yellowthroat - 1877 - Maryland yellow-throat; hardly common; very common in the White Mountains
- Cooper's Hawk - 1877 - Cooper's hawk
- Dark-eyed Junco - 1877 - snow-bird, Junco hyemalis; common
- Downy Woodpecker - 1877 - downy woodpecker; once seen in June, and common in August
- Eastern Bluebird - 1877 - blue bird; common near Malone
- Eastern Kingbird - 1877 - king-bird, Tyrannus Carolinensis; common
- Eastern Phoebe - 1877 - pewee, Sayornis fuscus
- Eastern Wood-Pewee - 1877 - wood pewee, Contopus virens
- Field Sparrow - 1877 - ?field sparrow
- Golden-crowned Kinglet - 1877 - golden-crowned wren; quite common
- Gray Catbird - 1877 - cat-bird; observed near Malone
- Gray Jay - 1877 - Canada jay; locally common in the thicker woods
- Great Blue Heron - 1877 - great blue heron; rare
- Great Crested Flycatcher - 1877 - great crested flycatcher; very rare
- Great Horned Owl - 1877 - great horned owl; common in wild parts
- Hairy Woodpecker - 1877 - hairy woodpecker; very common
- Hermit Thrush - 1877 - hermit thrush; common
- Herring Gull - 1877 - herring gull; rare, breeds
- Least Flycatcher - 1877 - least flycatcher; strikingly common, and much in tree-tops
- Magnolia Warbler - 1877 - Dendroeca maculosa, black and yellow warbler; not common
- Mourning Warbler - 1877 - mourning warbler; locally not uncommon
- Nashville Warbler - 1877 - Nashville warbler; not common
- Northern Flicker - 1877 - golden-winged woodpecker
- Northern Goshawk - 1877 - goshawk; found in June
- Northern Parula - 1877 - blue yellow-backed warbler; very common
- Northern Waterthrush - 1877 - Siurus naevius, water thrush; rare summer resident
- Olive-sided Flycatcher - 1877 - olive-sided flycatcher; not uncommon
- Osprey - 1877 - fish hawk; rare, but certainly breeds here
- Ovenbird - 1877 - golden-crowned thrush; quite common
- Passenger Pigeon - 1877 - wild pigeon; undoubtedly to be found here at times
- Pileated Woodpecker - 1877 - pileated woodpecker; rare
- Pine Siskin - 1874 - siskin; one specimen, August 27, 1874
- Purple Finch - 1877 - purple finch; common
- Purple Martin - 1877 - purple martin; one seen at Malone
- Red Crossbill - 1877 - red crossbill; not rare
- Red-breasted Merganser - 1877 - merganser, Mergus serrator; breed, rare
- Red-breasted Nuthatch - 1877 - red-bellied nuthatch; common
- Red-eyed Vireo - 1877 - red-eyed vireo; very common
- Red-tailed Hawk - 1877 - red-tailed buzzard
- Red-winged Blackbird - 1877 - red-winged blackbird; by no means abundant
- Ruby-throated Hummingbird - 1877 - hummingbird, Trochilus colubris; rare; lives in the woods
- Ruffed Grouse - 1877 - ruffed grouse; not uncommon
- Rusty Blackbird - 1877 - rusty blackbird; two or three seen in June
- Savannah Sparrow - 1877 - savannah sparrow; apparently rare
- Scarlet Tanager - 1877 - scarlet tanager; two pairs found in June near the Upper Saint Regis Lake
- Sharp-shinned Hawk - 1877 - sharp-shinned hawk
- Song Sparrow - 1877 - song sparrow; common; much less so than in the White Mountains
- Spotted Sandpiper - 1877 - spotted sandpiper
- Swainson's Thrush - 1877 - Swainson's thrush; commonest thrush
- Swamp Sparrow - 1877 - swamp sparrow; found in the wet ground covered with shrubs, which borders the stream connecting the Upper Saint Regis and Spitfire Lakes
- Tennessee Warbler - 1877 - ?Tennessee warbler
- Tree Swallow - 1877 - white-breasted swallow; common, and met with far from any buildings
- Vesper Sparrow - 1877 - bay-winged sparrow, Pooecetes gramineus; common
- Whip-poor-will - 1877 - whippoorwill; heard early in July
- White-throated Sparrow - 1877 - white-throated sparrow; common
- Willow Flycatcher - 1877 - Traill's flycatcher; rare
- Winter Wren - 1877 - winter wren; moderately common
- Wood Duck - 1877 - wood duck; breeds, rare
- Yellow Warbler - 1877 - yellow warbler; common near Malone
- Yellow-bellied Flycatcher - 1877 - yellow-bellied flycatcher; rather rare
- Yellow-bellied Sapsucker - 1877 - yellow-bellied woodpecker; quite common
- Yellow-rumped Warbler - 1877 - yellow-rumped warbler; common in August; resident in the White Mountains
This article was the first printed work from among the array of written history that was to be scribed by Roosevelt. With details on nearly 100 species, it conveys a the sense of status for species about 130 years in the past for a particular eastern American county.
Roosevelt continued to have an interest in birds, and according to history, was first in his college class in natural history. Although his focus for a career was personally and directly turned away from science in 1878, he still had a fervent appreciation for the outdoors and natural history.
There was another article published in 1879, based on observations from Oyster Bay, Long Island. Some of the first notations were from 1874, and following years, with less than half from an unattributed date, equitable for the year the article was once again, personally published. These records are given in chronological order.
- Common Name - Year Seen - Record Notes
- Fish Crow - 1874 - Corvus ossifragus; shot a male December 30, 1874
- Red-headed Woodpecker - 1874 - Melanerpes erythrocephalus; during the winter of 1873-1874, when it was not uncommon
- Peregrine Falcon - 1875 - Falco communis; a pair in September 1875; worked great havoc among the night herons
- Northern Mockingbird - 1876 - Mimus polyglottus; one shot August 15, 1876
- Snowy Owl - 1876 - Nyctea scandiaca; common in the autumn of 1876
- Willow Flycatcher - 1876 - Empidonax trailli; one shot June 12, 1876
- Connecticut Warbler - 1877 - Oporornis agilis; one shot September 25, 1877
- Golden-winged Warbler - 1878 - Helminthophaga chrysoptera; shot May 10, 1878; almost certain I have seen it in summer
- Savannah Sparrow - 1878 - Passerculus princeps; one shot December 28, 1878; one other seen; = ipswich sparrow = savannah sparrow
- Acadian Flycatcher - 1879 - Empidonax acadicus; rather common summer resident
- Black-capped Chickadee - 1879 - Parus atricapillus; nests
- Blue-winged Warbler - 1879 - Helminthophaga pinus; rather common summer resident, arriving early in May; found a nest on June 10
- Northern Parula - 1879 - Parula americana; rather common summer resident
- Pine Warbler - 1879 - Dendroica pinus; rather common summer resident; about as common as the aestiva
- Swainson's Thrush - 1879 - Turdus Swainsoni; common migrant; usually arrives from the north about September 20, departing about October 10; have found them as late as the middle of November
- Veery - 1879 - Turdus fuscescens; rather uncommon migrants; in spring, passes about the middle of May; in autumn, during the last week of August and first week of September
Both lists combined, contain details on 109 species, and are a substanative contribution to information on historic ornithology for the middle to late 1870s. The Franklin county contributions are notable especially for providing the only information for this place prior to 1880. There are other, previous records for the county in which Oyster Bay is located, among the known historic record of bird notes and observations.
In the early 1880s, Roosevelt's interest in natural history, though subsumed, continued him, especially writing a book on hunting, game animals and related outdoor aspects from the wilds of North Dakota, especially.
Once Roosevelt became President - serving the country from 1901 to 1909 - he was especially recognized for actions taken to conserve natural habitats and resources.
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