Great Blue Heron, Coons Rips, Kennebec River, Augusta, Maine. June, 2004.


The following article is copied verbatim from the June 20, 1826 edition of the Kennebec Journal, Augusta, Maine. The first part of the article is an account reprinted from the Oxford Observer newspaper published in Oxford, Maine. The second part in brackets is an editorial comment by the editor of the Kennebec Journal.

"On Wednesday, the 31st, part of the young men of this town, and Buckfield, who had been engaged in what they denominate a Squirrel Hunt, met to count their game. The following is the number and kinds of animals brought in and counted:

Skunks -- 21
Rackoons -- 142
Foxes -- 10
Woodchucks -- 649
Squirrels -- 190
Bobbolinks -- 624
Crows -- 115
Hawks -- 54
Owls -- 42
Woodpeckers -- 272
Brown Thrashers -- 50
Black Birds -- 36
Cat Birds -- 32
Blue Jays -- 39

Making in the total two thousand two hundred and seventy-six. -- Oxford Observer.

[He who would kill a brown thrasher (or rather thrush, we believe) has no 'music in his soul.' It inhabits the thickest shades; there is more melody in its notes than in those of any other bird in our forests. We are glad to see no robins returned among the slain. The shooting of small, harmless birds cannot be sport to a benevolent and refined mind. The object of the hunt in Buckfield, however, we suppose, was to destroy animals which injure the crops of the farmer.]"

Source: Kennebec Journal newspaper, edition of June 20, 1826, available on microfilm at the Maine State Library, Augusta, Maine.


What makes the above article from 1826 of particular interest today is that in February, 2005 the State of Alaska Board of Game reported that more than 87 wolves have been successfully shot and killed from airplanes during that state's 2004- 2005 airplane hunting season for wolves. Like the editor of the Kennebec Journal 180 years ago, we wonder if the killing of wolves from airplanes in 2005 can be considered "sport to a benevolent and refined mind."