Last updated: January 10, 2018
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The Herd is Here: Roosevelt Elk Herd Installation Arrives at Sagamore Hill
The herd is here. They have come to thank Theodore Roosevelt for leading the charge in the conservation movement and preserving their habitat.
The elk herd has arrived at Sagamore Hill after a long journey from Olympic National Park, the home to the largest unmanaged herd of Roosevelt elk in the Pacific Northwest. These elk will rest on the front lawn of the Theodore Roosevelt home, looking toward the iconic speaking porch, waiting to hear the words of Theodore Roosevelt and his promise of conservation. Constructed of aluminum, these full-scale, stylized elk mirror their natural surroundings. Visitors are challenged to reflect on their personal relationship to conservation.
Conservation From Here, an exhibit juxtaposing original art by artist Joseph Rossano with historical artifacts, originates at the home of the conservation movement’s most historically recognized champion, Theodore Roosevelt. The exhibit leads viewers to the understanding that conservation begins, for each of us, wherever Here might be…a moment in time, a unique perspective, or a physical place we inhabit or otherwise hold dear.
In 1893, Chief of Mammalogy for the USDA, C. Hart Merriam, was joined by Theodore Roosevelt at the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. As they examined the displayed heads of several of elk native to the area of the Olympic Mountains in the Pacific Northwest, Roosevelt identified for Merriam the characteristics that made it unique from the more common Plains elk. In 1897, Merriam recalled this conversation with Roosevelt when he identified the Olympic elk as a distinct subspecies. He wrote: I deem it a privilege to name this splendid animal Roosevelt’s wapiti. It is fitting that the noblest deer of America should perpetuate the name of one who, in the midst of a busy public career, has found time to study our larger mammals in their native haunts and has written the best accounts we have ever had of their habits and chase. In a letter dated December 9, 1897, Assistant Secretary of the Navy Roosevelt responded, “I deeply appreciate the compliment, and I am only sorry that it will never be in my power to do anything except to just merely appreciate it!” Little did he know that in just 4 short years he would be President.
As President, Roosevelt did not forget his commitment to the Roosevelt Elk ( Cervus Roosevelti ). However, his attempts to create a National Elk Reserve in the region of the Olympic Mountains in Washington had been stopped by Congress. By 1909, the Roosevelt Elk’s herd had shrunk dramatically and was hitting critical levels for survival. Using the Antiquities Act, Roosevelt then created Mount Olympus and 615,000 acres surrounding it a national monument that was off-limits to any kind of hunting, timbering, or extraction.
In addition to the installation of elk at the Theodore Roosevelt home, the exhibit will continue at the Old Orchard Museum at Sagamore Hill and the gallery at the Oyster Bay Historical Society. For more information, visit artist Joseph Rossano's website and and Sagamore Hill's website.
The elk herd has arrived at Sagamore Hill after a long journey from Olympic National Park, the home to the largest unmanaged herd of Roosevelt elk in the Pacific Northwest. These elk will rest on the front lawn of the Theodore Roosevelt home, looking toward the iconic speaking porch, waiting to hear the words of Theodore Roosevelt and his promise of conservation. Constructed of aluminum, these full-scale, stylized elk mirror their natural surroundings. Visitors are challenged to reflect on their personal relationship to conservation.
Conservation From Here, an exhibit juxtaposing original art by artist Joseph Rossano with historical artifacts, originates at the home of the conservation movement’s most historically recognized champion, Theodore Roosevelt. The exhibit leads viewers to the understanding that conservation begins, for each of us, wherever Here might be…a moment in time, a unique perspective, or a physical place we inhabit or otherwise hold dear.
In 1893, Chief of Mammalogy for the USDA, C. Hart Merriam, was joined by Theodore Roosevelt at the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. As they examined the displayed heads of several of elk native to the area of the Olympic Mountains in the Pacific Northwest, Roosevelt identified for Merriam the characteristics that made it unique from the more common Plains elk. In 1897, Merriam recalled this conversation with Roosevelt when he identified the Olympic elk as a distinct subspecies. He wrote: I deem it a privilege to name this splendid animal Roosevelt’s wapiti. It is fitting that the noblest deer of America should perpetuate the name of one who, in the midst of a busy public career, has found time to study our larger mammals in their native haunts and has written the best accounts we have ever had of their habits and chase. In a letter dated December 9, 1897, Assistant Secretary of the Navy Roosevelt responded, “I deeply appreciate the compliment, and I am only sorry that it will never be in my power to do anything except to just merely appreciate it!” Little did he know that in just 4 short years he would be President.
As President, Roosevelt did not forget his commitment to the Roosevelt Elk ( Cervus Roosevelti ). However, his attempts to create a National Elk Reserve in the region of the Olympic Mountains in Washington had been stopped by Congress. By 1909, the Roosevelt Elk’s herd had shrunk dramatically and was hitting critical levels for survival. Using the Antiquities Act, Roosevelt then created Mount Olympus and 615,000 acres surrounding it a national monument that was off-limits to any kind of hunting, timbering, or extraction.
In addition to the installation of elk at the Theodore Roosevelt home, the exhibit will continue at the Old Orchard Museum at Sagamore Hill and the gallery at the Oyster Bay Historical Society. For more information, visit artist Joseph Rossano's website and and Sagamore Hill's website.