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   publicid="-//Wesleyan University::Special Collections and Archives//TEXT (US::CtW::::Ray P. Holland, 1884-1973; Papers on Enforcement of the Migratory Bird Treaty)//EN"
   url="http://www.wesleyan.edu/libr/schome/FAs/ho1000-188.xml">ho1000-188</eadid>
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   <titlestmt>
    <titleproper>Register of the Ray P. Holland Papers on Enforcement of the Migratory Bird Treaty,
      <lb/><date normal="1872/1974">1872 - 1974</date>
    </titleproper>
    <author>Processed by: Richard Estabrook; machine-readable finding aid created by: Andrea
     Benefiel</author>

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   <publicationstmt>&hdrsca; <p><date normal="2010" encodinganalog="date">&#x00A9;
      2010</date> Wesleyan University. All Rights Reserved.</p>
   </publicationstmt>


  </filedesc>

  <profiledesc>
   <creation>Machine-readable finding aid derived from XML authoring program.<lb/>
    <date>Date of source: March, 2010</date>
   </creation>
   <langusage>Description is in <language langcode="eng">English</language>
   </langusage>

   <descrules>Finding aid was prepared using <title>DACS</title></descrules>

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 <frontmatter>
  <titlepage>
   <titleproper>Register of the Ray P. Holland Papers on Enforcement of the Migratory Bird Treaty,
     <date type="span">1872 - 1974</date>
   </titleproper>

   <publisher>
    <extptr show="embed" entityref="weseal"/> Special Collections &amp; Archives<lb/>Wesleyan
    University<lb/> Middletown, CT, USA </publisher>








   <!-- Delete paragraph below and this comment line if your institution does not copyright its findingaids. -->

   <p><date normal="2010">&#x00A9; 2010</date> Wesleyan University. All Rights Reserved.</p>
  </titlepage>
 </frontmatter>







 <archdesc level="collection" relatedencoding="MARC">

  <did>
   <head>Descriptive Summary</head>

   <repository label="Repository">Special Collections &amp; Archives, Wesleyan
    University</repository>

   <origination label="Creator">
    <persname encodinganalog="100">Holland, Ray P. (Ray Prunty), 1884-1973.</persname>
   </origination>

   <unittitle label="Title" encodinganalog="245">Ray P. Holland Papers on Enforcement of the
    Migratory Bird Treaty, <unitdate normal="1872/1970" type="inclusive">1872 -
    1974</unitdate></unittitle>

   <unitid countrycode="us" repositorycode="CtW" label="Call Number" encodinganalog="099"
    >1000-188</unitid>

   <langmaterial label="Language of Material" encodinganalog="546">Material in <language
     langcode="eng">English</language></langmaterial>

   <physdesc label="Linear Feet">

    <extent encodinganalog="300">11</extent>
   </physdesc>
   <physdesc label="Archival Boxes">
    <extent>25</extent>
   </physdesc>

   <physloc label="Location">For current information on the location of these materials, please
    consult Special Collections &amp; Archives staff.</physloc>

   <abstract label="Abstract" encodinganalog="545">Born in Atchison, Kansas, Ray P. Holland was
    interested in the outdoors beginning in his youth. He became a noted sportsman and writer, was
    dedicated to the management of wildlife and, as a United States Game Warden during World War I,
    became a key figure in the Supreme Court case of Missouri v. Holland, decided in 1920, a
    landmark case in constitutional and conservation law. Active in conservation groups such as the
    American Game Protective Association and the International Association of Game, Fish and
    Conservation Commissioners, Holland was editor of the magazine <title render="italic">Field
     &amp; Stream</title> during its heyday in the 1920s and 1930s. </abstract>


   <abstract encodinganalog="520">The bulk of the collection contains manuscripts, field diaries,
    publications, reports, and silent films related to wildlife conservation and game protection in
    the United States, from 1903-1970. It also contains a small amount of diaries, scrapbooks,
    correspondence and personal family items spanning 1872-1970. </abstract>

  </did>

  <descgrp type="admininfo">
   <head>Administrative Information</head>

   <accessrestrict encodinganalog="506">
    <head>Access Restrictions</head>
    <p>No restrictions. </p>
   </accessrestrict>

   <userestrict encodinganalog="540">
    <head>Copyright Notice</head>
    <p>Copyright for Official University records is held by Wesleyan University; all other copyright
     is retained by the authors of items in these papers, or their descendants, as stipulated by
     United States copyright law.</p>
   </userestrict>

   <prefercite>
    <head>Preferred Citation</head>
    <p>[Identification of item], Ray P. Holland Papers on Enforcement of the Migratory Bird Treaty,
     Collection #1000-188, Special Collections &amp; Archives, Wesleyan University, Middletown,
     CT, USA.</p>
   </prefercite>

   <acqinfo encodinganalog="541">
    <head>Acquisitions Information</head>
    <p>The papers of Ray P. Holland (1884-1973) were donated to Wesleyan University in 1973 by his
     widow, Mrs. Ray P. Holland. His sons Robert, Ray, Jr., and Dan cooperated in making
     arrangements for this gift. These papers came to Wesleyan from Quechee, Vermont in two
     installments, in June and August, 1973.</p>
   </acqinfo>

   <processinfo>
    <head>Processing Information</head>
    <p>Processed by Clement E. Vose and Richard Estabrook, 1975</p>
    <p>Encoded by Andrea Benefiel, March 2010</p>
   </processinfo>

  </descgrp>
  <!-- Enter each paragraph of the bioghist in separate p elements. -->
  <bioghist>
   <head>Biographical Note</head>
   <p>Born in Atchison, Kansas, Ray P. Holland was interested in the outdoors from an early age. He
    became a noted sportsman and writer, was dedicated to the management of wildlife and, as a
    United States Game Warden during World War I, became a key figure in the Supreme Court case of
    Missouri v. Holland, decided in 1920, a landmark case in constitutional and conservation law.
    Active in conservation groups such as the American Game Protective Association and the
    International Association of Game, Fish, and Conservation Commissioners, Holland was editor of
    the magazine <title render="italic">Field &amp; Stream</title> during its heyday in the
    1920s and 1930s. </p>
   <chronlist>
    <head>Chronology List</head>


    <chronitem>
     <date>1884</date>
     <event>Born, August 20, Atchison, Kansas, Raymond Prunty Holland, known throughout life as Ray
      P. Holland. Father, Dr. Daniel J. Holland, a physician, died in 1890. Mother, Mary E. Prunty
      Holland later remarried, to A. J. Hawri. Uncle, Dr. William J. Holland, a prominent
      entomologist, was director of the Carnegie Museum in Pittsburgh for many years. </event>
    </chronitem>
    <chronitem>
     <date>1893-1919 </date>
     <event>HUNTING AND FISHING ON THE MISSOURI RIVER. Settled in 1854, Atchison was an important
      stop for wagon trains, a railroad terminal, and a booming river city when Holland was a child.
      Holland was entranced with the Missouri River which was navigable far north from Atchison
      along the Nebraska border, across South Dakota and North Dakota to Montana and south from
      Atchison across Missouri to join the Mississippi River above St. Louis. He knew the river
      boats, the pleasures of fishing and lived in a boyhood style reminiscent of <title
       render="italic">The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</title> which Mark Twain published in
      1883. Holland was also a hunter who "shot his first duck, a greenwing teal, with a
      muzzle-loading shotgun in October of 1893. He was 9 years old." [Ted Trueblood, "Ray P.
      Holland," <title render="italic">Field &amp; Stream</title>, June 1970, pp. 195-l96.]
      There are four great, distinguishable flyways taken by migratory birds in their spring flights
      to breeding grounds in Canada and their fall return south: the Atlantic, Mississippi, Central
      and Pacific flyways. Holland was an avid duck hunter and came easily to identify all of the
      birds on the great Mississippi flyway. He has written that he owned one of the first
      motorboats on the river at Atchison and traveled widely with it, probably before 1910.
      [Holland, "It Was Mostly Luck," unpub. MSS., Holland Papers, container 10, p. xi-7.] With
      friends, Holland was out hunting or fishing in season through all the years he resided in
      Atchison until he moved East to New York in 1919. </event>
    </chronitem>

    <chronitem>
     <date>1893-1903 </date>
     <event>EDUCATION. After passing through grammar school, Holland attended Atchison High School,
      the College Preparatory School at Atchison, from 1899 to 1902 and then, for one year, was a
      student at the Lawrenceville School in New Jersey. He abandoned an intention to enter
      Princeton University in 1903. </event>
    </chronitem>


    <chronitem>
     <date>1903-1912</date>
     <eventgrp>
      <event>EARLY OCCUPATIONS. A paper carrier for the <title render="italic">Atchison
        Globe</title> when quite young, Holland listed himself later as an accountant and held a
       series of jobs in Atchison during the decade after finishing his formal education. He worked
       in a lumber yard, was cashier of the Atchison Railway, Light and Power Company, ran the
       office of a small foundry and, finally, as order and price clerk was in charge of the
       Atchison Saddlery.</event>
      <event>MARRIAGE AND FAMILY. Holland married Ruth Marie Perkins, October 16, 1907. They took a
       river steamboat from Atchison to New Orleans for a wedding trip during which they made visits
       of several days each in St. Louis, Cape Giradeau, Memphis, Vicksburg and, of course, New
       Orleans, returning by train. Their children were three: Robert Perkins, Raymond Prunty, Jr.,
       and Daniel John. </event>
     </eventgrp>
    </chronitem>

    <chronitem>
     <date>1903-1919</date>
     <eventgrp>
      <event>FREE-LANCE WRITER OF THE OUTDOORS. Engrossment with the pleasures of camping, hunting
       and fishing began to payoff in dollars as Holland's stories and articles poured forth. He
       sent a story done for a class at Lawrenceville School to the magazine <title render="italic"
        >Sports Afield</title> and got back a check. By 1912 he was a serious writer, committed
       enough and successful enough to give up other work and become a full-time free lance. This
       permitted him even more time in the field, more time to observe and indulge in hunting and
       fishing and, thereby, become a more authoritative writer. In the winter of 1913, and at other
       times later, he and his family spent the winter at Balboa Beach, near Newport Bay, south of
       Los Angeles where, as he later wrote, "I could beat a typewriter one day and hunt and fish
       the next." [Holland, "It Was Mostly Luck," container 10, p. xiii-1. ] Among his early
       writings were "A Goose That Was a Goose," <title render="italic">Recreation</title>, March
       1912, pp. 132-133; "How Fast Can a Duck Fly?," <title render="italic">Outing</title>,
       September 1913, pp. 748-753; "Calling California Ducks," <title render="italic"
        >Outing</title>, November 1913, pp. 139-145; "Geese and More Geese," Field and Stream,
       December 1913, pp. 814-820; and "Do Birds Return to Their Own Nests?," <title render="italic"
        >Outdoor World &amp; Recreation</title>, July 1914, pp. 19-20. </event>
      <event>WILDLIFE PHOTOGRAPHY. Holland's publications were commonly run with photographs he
       snapped and developed. Perhaps his first published photograph was of a beehive in Atchison
       which appeared over the caption, "A Boy Whom Bees Do Not Sting," in <title render="italic"
        >Leslie's Weekly</title>, September 24, 1913. As Holland's views about the place of hunting
       matured and his belief in conservation ripened he spoke out in favor of the camera instead of
       the gun for out-of-season pleasure, urging "all you old duck-hunters try my way of spring
       shooting." He went on: "And when you get the same old restlessness in the spring, when the
       ducks and geese start north, you can go and hunt as long as you please. There is no limit. I
       have shot thousands and thousands and thousands in a day, and my conscience never hurt me one
       whit. Then, again, you can always take these pictures out and hunt these same hunts over and
       over again. If you are the least bit inclined to play with a kodak try this duck game some
       day and you will undoubtedly get the fever." [Holland, "The Gun for Spring Shooting," <title
        render="italic">Outdoor World &amp; Recreation</title>, July 1913, p. 33. For a
       remarkable photograph of a duck blind, the original of which is in container 13, see Holland,
       "The Top Notch of Outdoor Photography," <title render="italic">Outing</title>, May 1914, pp.
       192-201.] </event>
     </eventgrp>
    </chronitem>

    <chronitem>
     <date>1914</date>
     <event>LOBBYIST FOR NATIONAL LIMIT ON SPRING SHOOTING. Through wide reading and observation,
      Holland became an advocate of the Weeks-McLean bill which passed Congress as the Migratory
      Bird Protection Act of March 3, 1913 [37 Stat. 847]. He and Gene Howe, son of Ed Howe who was
      editor of the <title render="italic">Atchison Globe</title>, "decided to join the anti-spring
      shooting crowd" in seeking appropriations to enforce the new law. They sent numerous telegrams
      to Congressmen in Washington to this end. [Holland, "It Was Mostly Luck," container 10, p.
      xiii-3.] </event>
    </chronitem>


    <chronitem>
     <date>1914-1919</date>
     <eventgrp>
      <event>UNITED STATES GAME WARDEN. Having taken a civil service examination at Leavenworth, in
       August 1914, Holland was appointed District Inspector and United States Game Warden in the
       Biological Survey of the U.S. Department of Agriculture with the specific duty of enforcing
       the new Migratory Bird Protection Act in seven midwestern states. He continued to live in
       Atchison, Kansas and was regarded by some hunters in other states not to have jurisdiction
       over them. He took both an educational approach and an enforcement approach to the law. Thus
       he arranged to speak to groups of hunters in duck clubs throughout the region to persuade
       them that limits were needed on shooting to preserve waterfowl and that bag limits and
       seasonal limits would be effective to protect their interests as sportsmen. Holland's
       interest was to stop the "game hogs" and the market hunters who were depleting the supply of
       game by wholesale slaughter. </event>
      <event>UNCONSTITUTIONALITY OF THE MIGRATORY BIRD PROTECTION ACT OF 1913. Opponents of the new
       act stood on the ground of state's rights, arguing that the commerce clause of the United
       States Constitution was not a valid basis for national regulation of waterfowl shooting. The
       opposition tested the act successfully by finding a judge in Jonesboro, Arkansas who held the
       Federal law unconstitutional. [United States v. Shauver, 214 Fed. 154 (1914).] Warden Holland
       hoped to counter this by bringing a test case of his own in that he hoped would be the more
       hospitable United States Court in Kansas City, Kansas but this, too, failed. [United States
       v. McCullagh, 221 Fed. 288 (1915).] Holland continued in his position while sportsmen,
       conservationists and the lawyers considered in Washington what course to take.</event>
      <event>CANADA-UNITED STATES MIGRATORY BIRD TREATY. Many favorable to the 1913 act feared that
       it had an insufficient constitutional basis at the time and urged that authority for national
       regulation be based on the treaty power. One of these was Elihu Root who made the argument as
       early as 1913. The idea was in the air from then on and was fed by the judicial set backs in
       the Midwest. It was decided to negotiate a treaty with Great Britain to protect migratory
       birds in both Canada and the United States. At the same time the appeal of the Shauver and
       McCullagh cases was delayed and then abandoned by the Department of Justice; the Supreme
       Court never revisited those rulings. A treaty was signed and promulgated in 1916.</event>
      <event>MIGRATORY BIRD TREATY ACT. The bilateral treaty between Canada and the United States
       was implemented to provide penalties for violations and appropriations for enforcement by the
       Migratory Bird Treaty Act of July 3, 1918 [40 Stat. 755].</event>
     </eventgrp>
    </chronitem>

    <chronitem>
     <date>1919-1920</date>
     <event>MISSOURI V. HOLLAND. In the spring of 1919. United States Game Warden Ray P. Holland
      made arrests for shooting ducks out of season, arrests that led directly to testing the
      constitutional reach of the treaty power as a basis for protecting migratory birds. Those
      arrested at a club near Neosho, Missouri were two bankers and an insurance executive from
      Kansas City, the Democratic committeeman from Missouri and the attorney general of the State
      of Missouri. Frank W. McAllister. Immediately upon arraignment before the U.S. Commissioner in
      Clinton, Missouri, the local sheriff, under the direction of McAllister, turned the tables and
      had Holland arrested for having wild ducks in his possession without a Missouri hunting
      license. This charge was dropped but soon the State of Missouri brought suit in the Federal
      district court at Kansas City, claiming that Holland had acted unconstitutionally in enforcing
      the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. The Act was upheld in this case in June, 1919 and Missouri
      appealed to the United States Supreme Court. On April 19, 1920 the Court ruled, in an opinion
      by Mr. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., that the Migratory Bird Treaty of 1916 and the
      Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918 were constitutional. As constitutional doctrine, the
      importance of this case has rested on its broad reading of the treaty power as against the
      claim of a state. But this case of Missouri v. Holland, 252 U.S. 416 (1920), is also
      significant in conservation law, as can be seen in the following passage from the opinion by
      Holmes: "To put the claim of the State upon title is to lean against a slender reed. Wild
      birds are not in the possession of anyone; and possession is the beginning of ownership. The
      whole foundation of the states' rights is the presence within their jurisdiction of birds that
      yesterday had not arrived, tomorrow may be in another state and in a week a thousand miles
      away." </event>
    </chronitem>

    <chronitem>
     <date>1919-1924</date>
     <eventgrp>
      <event>AMERICAN GAME PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATION. Holland's writing, which he had continued while a
       U.S. Game Warden in the Midwest --chiefly under the nom de plume of "Bob White" --and now his
       prominence in the test case of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, led one of the leading
       sportsmen's advocates of the day, John E. Burnham, to invite him to New York City to edit the
        <title render="italic">Bulletin of the American Game Protective Association</title>. Holland
       moved his family East, briefly to White Plains and then to Scarsdale, to accept this
       position. His office was on the 22nd floor of the Woolworth Building and his duties were to
       edit the monthly <title render="italic">Bulletin </title>as well as to prepare a special
       newsletter of the Association that several prominently known outdoor magazines published in
       their columns. Founded in 1911, the full name of the organization was the American Game
       Protective and Propagation Association. Support was plentiful, coming on the one hand from
       arms and ammunition makers who were "farsighted" and, on the other, from men of means
       interested in game refuges and in sport. </event>
      <event>Holland's views and those of others in the American Game Protective Association were in
       harmony. "The basic idea of this organization is 'Sport for Sport's Sake.' We want to
       increase game by setting aside sanctuaries where game birds may breed undisturbed at all
       times, through the establishment of state game farms by means of which public covers may be
       stocked." [<title render="italic">Bulletin of the American Game Protective
        Association</title>, January 1919, p. 12.] Every new member was sent a copy of "The American
       Sportsman's Creed" composed by Zane Grey (1875-1939) and first published in 1918, a statement
       that pledged prudence and fair play in hunting, scientific study, and game preservation.
        [<title render="italic">Bulletin</title>, July 1918, p. 3.]</event>
     </eventgrp>
    </chronitem>

    <chronitem>
     <date>1919-1934</date>
     <eventgrp>
      <event>GAME REFUGES, PUBLIC SHOOTING GROUNDS, AND A FEDERAL DUCK STAMP. The gnarled story of
       the origins of the Federal Duck Stamp to support game refuges is difficult to spell out, but,
       while Holland's importance is often not credited in published accounts, it is clear that his
       role was significant.</event>

      <event>Holland published the first known statement of the idea of a duck stamp in the <title
        render="italic">Bulletin </title>he edited, thus spreading the notion that a migratory bird
       protective fund be created by imposing a Federal hunting license upon those wishing to hunt
       migratory fowl. This is a part of the idea, as originally set forth: "During the war the
       government established a method of issuing war savings stamps through the post offices of the
       country, and this agency for distribution was very successful in reaching those who were
       desirous of buying the stamps. The same machinery can be used for selling hunting licenses,
       the licenses being evidenced by a stamp to be affixed to the applicant's state hunting
       license and cancelled." [A. S. Houghton, "A Federal Hunting License," <title render="italic"
        >Bulletin</title>, April 1920, p. 15.] This was advanced in detail by Holland in the July
       1920 issue of <title render="italic">Field and Stream</title>. There would be a 50 cent duck
       stamp issued annually by the Department of Agriculture, the revenue from which would be for
       the special purpose of acquiring, developing and maintaining Federal waterfowl refuges. This
       idea originated with three people: George Lawyer, Chief Harden under the Biological Survey,
       John Burnham and Holland. </event>

      <event>For several years beginning around 1922, Holland was joined by Dr. Edward H. Nelson of
       the Biological Survey as the chief advocates of a program that combined refuge maintenance
       with hunting, all financed by a Federal licensing stamp. Opposition emerged among sportsmen
       and conservationists, in part perhaps because of the plain-spoken name given to the bill in
       Congress where the Nelson-Holland proposal was officially styled as "The Public Shooting
       Grounds Bill." A friend of the measure has described the controversy in the 1920s as follows:
       "Strong opposition was led by Dr. [William T.] Hornaday and was initially supported by <title
        render="italic">Outdoor Life</title>, the infant Izaac Walton League, the Camp-Fire Club,
       Aldo Leopold, Fiorello La Guardia, and others who feared the refuges would turn into
       federally maintained shooting preserves which would produce no surplus of birds. Advocates of
       the Nelson-Holland proposal included the Boone and Crockett Club and the National Association
       of Audubon Societies. Dr. Nelson maintained that because of food scarcity on the wintering
       grounds, a great increase in the waterfowl population was not then desirable, and that the
       birds would benefit most from state-regulated shooting combined with federally regulated game
       management on refuges. He was seconded in an Audubon bulletin by Charles Sheldon, who was
       also an influential member of the Boone and Crockett Club. Though the bill was defeated, the
       Camp-Fire Club, the Izaac Walton League, and <title render="italic">Outdoor Life</title>
       eventually saw the light of reason--in the form of sport-supported refuges which eventually
       materialized in the acquisition program authorized by the 1929 Migratory Bird Conservation
       Act." [Robert Elman, <title render="italic">The Atlantic Flyway </title>(New York:
       Winchester' Press, 1972), pp. 170-171. Also, see Migratory Bird Conservation Act, Feb. 18,
       1929, 45 Stat. 1222, 16 U.S.C. sec. 715.]</event>

      <event>While the 1929 Act authorized land purchases and the Bureau of Biological Survey
       surveyed for places suitable for waterfowl and for purchase, appropriations were insufficient
       to go far. The drought of the early 1930s reduced breeding grounds for ducks while the kill
       by man rose sharply. This disastrous trend was reversed with enactment of the Migratory Bird
       Hunting Stamp Act of 1934. Popularly known as the Duck Stamp Act, this led Henry Wallace,
       Secretary of Agriculture, to name Jay N. "Ding" Darling to be Chief of a reorganized Bureau
       of Biological Survey which included a new Refuge Division. Labor from the WPA and CCC, along
       with "creation and sale of duck stamps-which by 1970 had realized over 175 million dollars
       for migratory waterfowl refuges--was an important part of their plan." [Jene C. Gilmore,
        <title render="italic">Art for conservation: The Federal Duck Stamps</title> (Barre, Mass.:
       Barre Publishers, 1971), p. 15. Also, see the Migratory Bird Hunting Stamp Act, March 16,
       1934, 48 Stat. 451, 16 U. S. C. sec. 718.] The first stamp, for 1934-1935, was designed by
       Darling, and sold for $1.00 beginning August 14, 1934. Ray Holland and the other originators
       of the duck stamp idea are not mentioned in the book on the subject, cited above. </event>
     </eventgrp>
    </chronitem>

    <chronitem>
     <date>1919-1970</date>
     <event>INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF GAME, FISH AND CONSERVATION COMMISSIONERS. Holland became
      active in the International Association of Game, Fish and Conservation Commissioners (founded
      in 1902) while serving as U.S. Game Warden. He was elected its secretary at the meeting in
      Ottawa, Canada in 1920. He served in this position, and as treasurer as well, for 22 years,
      later being elected to be an honorary life member. Work on legislation and the cooperative
      efforts of the several states and provinces here and in Canada was greatly aided by this
      organization. </event>
    </chronitem>

    <chronitem>
     <date>1924-1941</date>
     <event>FIELD &amp; STREAM. Holland served as editor of <title render="italic">Field
       &amp; Stream</title> from 1924 to 1941. Founded in 1895, its circulation grew rapidly
      during the 1920s and 1930s. A member of the staff today has recalled that, during Holland's
      editorship, "<title render="italic">Field &amp; Stream</title> published the works of some
      of the best writers and artists of the era--John Taintor Foote, Irvin S. Cobb, Havilah
      Babcock, David M. Hewell, Clarke Venable, Harold Titus, Archibald Rutledge, Ray Mullholland,
      Gordon MacQuarrie, Corey Ford, Edison Marshall, Albert Bigelow Paine, Bob Davis, Erle Stanley
      Gardner, Frank Dufresne, C. E. Gillham--plus everyone who amounted to anything in the outdoor
      writing field during this period. " [Trueblood, "Ray P. Holland," <title render="italic">Field
       &amp; Stream</title>, June 1970, p. 198.] As an editorial advocate, Holland used his
      position to work for waterfowl and other national legislation described above. But Holland and
      his audience of sportsmen also opposed gun control of every sort, perhaps most notably in the
      form of criticism in the late 1930s of the Sullivan Law in New York State that required
      registration of handguns. </event>
    </chronitem>

    <chronitem>
     <date>1935</date>
     <event>Served G. &amp; C. Merriam Co. as special editor on the subjects of hunting and
      field sports for Webster's New International Dictionary of the English Language, Second
      Edition, Unabridged. </event>
    </chronitem>


    <chronitem>
     <date>1941</date>
     <event>Resigned editorship of <title render="italic">Field &amp; Stream</title>.</event>
    </chronitem>

    <chronitem>
     <date>1941-1973 </date>
     <eventgrp>
      <event>ACTIVITIES IN LATER YEARS. Holland continued to combine much outdoor life with further
       free-lance writing. He had hunted for 14 consecutive years in Saskatchewan. Now he began
       spending winters in Naples, Florida and, after the war, for ten years spent up to three
       months each winter in Cuba. In the late 1940s he moved to Quechee, Vermont for the summer
       months. When Castro came to power in Cuba, Holland spent the winter months in Roswell, New
       Mexico. In addition to the many books listed in the bibliography at page 10 of this register,
       he wrote articles and stories for many magazines in the postwar period, <title
        render="italic">The Saturday Evening Post</title>, <title render="italic">Liberty</title>,
        <title render="italic">Collier's</title>, <title render="italic">Nation's Business</title>,
        <title render="italic">True,</title> and <title render="italic">American Legion</title>
       among them. His last published story was "Desert Tragedy," <title render="italic">Field
        &amp; Stream</title>, September 1966.</event>

      <event>Not politically active apart from conservation issues, Holland did question the growth
       of national power during his later years. He approved of the effort, manifested by the
       so-called "Bricker Amendment," aimed at reducing the President's authority to make Executive
       Agreements and at limiting the treaty power's effect on domestic matters. The rule of
       Missouri v. Holland was a target and he joined in aiming at it. Holland's sentiments were
       conveyed to a national columnist who described them well. [See Raymond Moley, "Perspective:
       Behind Holland v. Missouri [sic]," <title render="italic">Newsweek</title>, October 19, 1953.
       p. 124. Clipping in container 4, folder 11, Holland Papers.] </event>

      <event>The American Game Protection Association had been in virtual hibernation after 1924,
       and Holland and a group of others revived the organization in 1958. He became President, and
       the Association endowed and established many game refuges in midwestern states during the
       next decade. Finally a merger was decided upon and Holland retired from this activity upon
       the formation of the consolidated organization known as the "New York Conservation Council
       and the American Game Association Foundation, Inc." in 1969. </event>
     </eventgrp>
    </chronitem>

    <chronitem>
     <date>1973</date>
     <event>Died February 20, 1973 at age 88 in Roswell, New Mexico. Survived by his widow and three
      sons. He was buried in the family plot in Atchison, Kansas. [Ted Trueblood, "Ray P. Hol1and,
      1884-1973," <title render="italic">Field &amp; Stream</title>, May 1973, p. 96.] </event>
    </chronitem>
   </chronlist>
   <!-- use "Chronlist Tags" here if there is a chronology -->
  </bioghist>


  <!-- Enter each paragraph of the scopecontent and arrangement in separate p elements. -->
  <scopecontent>
   <head>Collection Overview</head>
   <p>There is no comprehensive collection of materials pertaining to and arising out of Holland's
    rich life. However, the materials described here and held at Wesleyan University do touch, in
    some measure, nearly every part of his long career. The bulk of the collection contains
    manuscripts, field diaries, publications, reports, silent films, artworks, and books related to
    wildlife conservation and game protection in the United States, from 1903 to 1970. It also
    contains a small amount of diaries, scrapbooks, correspondence and personal family items
    spanning 1872 to 1970. </p>

   <arrangement>
    <head>Collection Arrangement</head>
    <p>Richard Estabrook of the class of 1974 assisted in the organization and description of the
     Holland papers. The collection is organized into ten series: Family Materials, 1872-1974;
     Holland Writings, 1903-1965; Wildlife Photographs, 1910-1965; Migratory Bird Conservation,
     1913-1937; American Game Protective Association, 1911-1969; International Association of Game,
     Fish and Conservation Commissioners, 1912-1970; <title render="italic">Field &amp;
      Stream</title> Motion Pictures of Hunting and Fishing, 1924-1931; Wildlife Art, 1939-1944;
      <title render="italic">Field &amp; Stream</title>, 1939-1944; and Books, 1929-1962. </p>
   </arrangement>
  </scopecontent>

  <controlaccess>
   <head>Online Catalog Headings</head>
   <p>These and related materials may be found under the following headings in online catalogs.</p>
   <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="600">Holland, Ray P. (Ray Prunty), 1884-1973.</persname>
   <genre source="aat" encodinganalog="655">Diaries.</genre>
   <genre source="aat" encodinganalog="655">Appointment books.</genre>
   <genre source="aat" encodinganalog="655">Photographs.</genre>
   <genre source="aat" encodinganalog="655">Scrapbooks.</genre>
   <genre source="aat" encodinganalog="655">Silent films.</genre>
   <genre source="aat" encodinganalog="655">Drawings (visual works)</genre>
   <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Wildlife conservation.</subject>
   <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Game protection--United States.</subject>
   <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Game wardens--United States.</subject>
   <corpname source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">American Game Protective Association.</corpname>
   <corpname source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">International Association of Game, Fish, and
    Conservation Commissioners.</corpname>
   <title source="lcsh" encodinganalog="630">Field &amp; stream.</title>
   <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Migratory birds--Conservation.</subject>
   <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Migratory Bird Treaty Act. 1918.</subject>
   <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Migratory animal conservation.</subject>


   <!-- use "Item Level Tags" here for controlaccess terms -->




  </controlaccess>

  <!-- Use separated materials and related materials clips here to enter in information -->


  <dsc type="combined">
   <head>Detailed Description of the Collection</head>
   <!-- use component levels clips to enter in the description of subordinate components -->
   <c01 level="series">
    <did>
     <unittitle>Family Materials, </unittitle>
     <unitdate type="inclusive">1872-1974</unitdate>
    </did>

    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">1</container>
      <unittitle>Diary, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1872 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">1</container>
      <unittitle>Register of calls, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1888 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">1</container>
      <unittitle>Address books, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">undated</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">1</container>
      <unittitle>Autograph book, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">undated</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">1</container>
      <unittitle>Scrapbook, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1872-1925</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>

    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">1</container>
      <unittitle>Photographs, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">undated</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">2</container>
      <unittitle>Correspondence with mother, Mrs. A. J. Harwi, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1921-1926 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">3</container>
      <unittitle>Letters received: </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
     </did>
     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">3</container>
       <unittitle>when named editor-in-chief, <title render="italic">Field &amp; Stream</title>, </unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive">1924 </unitdate>
      </did>
     </c03>

     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">3</container>
       <unittitle>concerning publications, </unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive">1926-1938</unitdate>
      </did>
     </c03>
     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">3</container>
       <unittitle>about book, <title render="italic">My Gun Dogs</title>, </unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive">1929 </unitdate>
      </did>
     </c03>

     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">3</container>
       <unittitle>about book, <title render="italic">Nip and Tuck</title>, </unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive">1938-1943</unitdate>
      </did>
     </c03>
     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">3</container>
       <unittitle>upon retirement as editor-in-chief, <title render="italic">Field &amp;
         Stream</title>, </unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive">1941 </unitdate>
      </did>
     </c03>
     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">3</container>
       <unittitle>concerning publications, </unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive">1942-1946 </unitdate>
      </did>
     </c03>
    </c02>

    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">4</container>
      <unittitle>Scientific bulletins, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1950, undated </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">4</container>
      <unittitle>Correspondence on public issues, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1938-1969 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">4</container>
      <unittitle>Correspondence and documents, personal matters, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">ca. 1965</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">4</container>
      <unittitle>Biographical materials about Holland, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1953-1967</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>

    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">4</container>
      <unittitle>Advertisements of Holland publications, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1942, undated </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">4</container>
      <unittitle>Cassette tape recordings of Holland bird calls and reminiscences. With letter from
       Dan Holland to C. Vose, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1969, September 1974 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
   </c01>

   <c01 level="series">
    <did>
     <unittitle>Holland Writings, </unittitle>
     <unitdate type="inclusive">1903-1965</unitdate>
    </did>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">5</container>
      <unittitle>Typescripts of approximately 35 stories</unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">6</container>
      <unittitle>Typescripts of stories (2 folders)</unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">7</container>
      <unittitle>Typescript carbons of stories </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">7</container>
      <unittitle>Typescripts of stories, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1925-1945</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">8</container>
      <unittitle>Typescripts of stories (5 folders) </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">9</container>
      <unittitle>Typescript of unpublished autobiography of wife, Ruth Perkins Holland, entitled
       "Seventh Daughter," 126 pp., (drafts, more than one copy), </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">ca. 1955 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">9</container>
      <unittitle>Typescript of unpublished autobiography of Holland, entitled "It Was Mostly Luck,"
       about 600 pp., (drafts, more than one copy), </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">ca. 1957 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">9</container>
      <unittitle>Letter received declining publication of autobiography, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1957 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">10</container>
      <unittitle>Typescripts of "It Was Mostly Luck" (additional copies) </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">10</container>
      <unittitle>Tearsheets of published articles by Holland from numerous magazines, (approximately
       100 articles), </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1912-1960</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">11</container>
      <unittitle>Magazines containing stories and articles by Holland. (17 magazines, including some
       duplicates, such as <title render="italic">Leslie's Weekly</title>, <title render="italic"
        >Recreation</title>, <title render="italic">Outing</title>, <title render="italic">Outer's
        Book</title>, <title render="italic">Field and Stream</title>, and <title render="italic"
        >Outdoor Life</title>), </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1911-1917</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">12</container>
      <unittitle>Magazines containing stories, articles and editorials by Holland under his own name
       and the pseudonym "Bob White." (18 copies of various issues of <title render="italic">Field
        and Stream</title> - the ampersand came into use in 1923 - and of <title render="italic"
        >Field &amp; Stream</title>, and a single issue of <title render="italic">The American
        Magazine</title>, Feb. 1924) </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1921-1928</unitdate>
     </did>

     <accessrestrict>

      <p>[Missing as of January 1999.]</p>

     </accessrestrict>

    </c02>
   </c01>

   <c01 level="series">
    <did>
     <unittitle>Wildlife Photographs, </unittitle>
     <unitdate type="inclusive">1910-1965</unitdate>
    </did>

    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">13</container>
      <unittitle>Black and white, including duck blinds, later published, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1910-1929</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">13</container>
      <unittitle>Kodiak bear, hunting dogs in car, others, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1929-1938</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">13</container>
      <unittitle>Hunting scenes in Cuba, snakes and other wildlife, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1939-1949</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">13</container>
      <unittitle>Color print of Hungarian Partridge in Alberta Province, with dedication to Holland, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1939 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">13</container>
      <unittitle>Hunting dogs, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">ca. 1946</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>

    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">14</container>
      <unittitle>Photos for book, <title render="italic">Nip and Tuck</title>
      </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">14</container>
      <unittitle>Hunting dogs (2 folders)</unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">14</container>
      <unittitle>Color portfolio of birds with identities by Canadian National Parks service </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">14</container>
      <unittitle>Camping and hunting scenes with Holland family members pictured in Cuba and various
       places in the United States, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1946-1959 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
   </c01>

   <c01 level="series">
    <did>
     <unittitle>Migratory Bird Conservation, </unittitle>
     <unitdate type="inclusive">1913-1937</unitdate>
    </did>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">15</container>
      <unittitle>Field diaries kept by Holland during service as U.S. Game Warden, Biological
       Survey, Department of Agriculture, (13 diaries), </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1913-1919 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">15</container>
      <unittitle>Coded enforcement booklets (5 booklets), </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">undated</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">15</container>
      <unittitle>Expense book, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">March 1918-June 1919 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">15</container>
      <unittitle>Correspondence about case of Missouri v. Holland, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1918-1920 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">15</container>
      <unittitle/>
      <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">15</container>
      <unittitle>Documents of Missouri v. Holland, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1919-1920</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">15</container>
      <unittitle>News clippings about Missouri v. Holland, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1919-1953 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">16</container>
      <unittitle>Bulletin on migratory bird patterns by Wells W. Cooke, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1906 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">16</container>
      <unittitle>Congressional Record, dealing with appropriations bill (H.R. 13679) to protect
       migratory birds, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">May 12, 1914 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">16</container>
      <unittitle>Materials on bills for "public shooting grounds and bird refuges" </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1921-1924</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>

    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">16</container>
      <unittitle>Correspondence from and publications of William T. Hornaday, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1925-1930 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">16</container>
      <unittitle>Correspondence concerning identity of large Canadian goose, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1930-1937 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">16</container>
      <unittitle>Letter, Dan Holland to C. E. Vose, explaining above, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">Sept. 26, 1973</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
   </c01>

   <c01 level="series">
    <did>
     <unittitle>American Game Protective Association, </unittitle>
     <unitdate type="inclusive">1911-1969</unitdate>
    </did>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">17</container>
      <unittitle>Bulletin of American Game Protective Association, bound in two volumes, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1913-1918, 1919-1923</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">17</container>
      <unittitle>Typescript and mimeograph copies of AGPA bulletins prepared by Holland for outdoor
       magazines (arranged in six folders by year), </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1919-1924 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">18</container>
      <unittitle>Financial Reports (2 folders), </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1958-1968</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">18</container>
      <unittitle>Minutes and correspondence, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1961-1965 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>

    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">18</container>
      <unittitle>Materials (4 folders), </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1960-1966 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">19</container>
      <unittitle>Materials (2 folders), </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1960-1966</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">19</container>
      <unittitle>Game Refuges supported by American Game Protective Association, </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1963-1969</unitdate>
     </did>

     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">19</container>
       <unittitle>Bronze markers</unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
      </did>

     </c03>
     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">19</container>
       <unittitle>Colorado </unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
      </did>
     </c03>
     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">19</container>
       <unittitle>Idaho </unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
      </did>
     </c03>
     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">19</container>
       <unittitle>Iowa </unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
      </did>
     </c03>
     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">19</container>
       <unittitle>Minnesota </unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
      </did>
     </c03>
     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">19</container>
       <unittitle>Montana</unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
      </did>
     </c03>
     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">19</container>
       <unittitle>Nebraska </unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
      </did>
     </c03>
     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">19</container>
       <unittitle>North Dakota </unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
      </did>
     </c03>
     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">19</container>
       <unittitle>South Dakota (3 folders) </unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
      </did>
     </c03>
     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">20</container>
       <unittitle>Utah </unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
      </did>
     </c03>
     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">20</container>
       <unittitle>Wisconsin</unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
      </did>
     </c03>
     <c03>
      <did>
       <container type="Box">20</container>
       <unittitle>Wyoming </unittitle>
       <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
      </did>
     </c03>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">20</container>
      <unittitle>Tax exemption as charitable organization in New York State </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">20</container>
      <unittitle>New Mexico litigation over deer killed in National Park </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
     </did>
    </c02>

    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">20</container>
      <unittitle>Correspondence with Seth Gordon, some concerning activities of International
       Association of Game, Fish and Conservation Commissioners </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">20</container>
      <unittitle>Ducks Unlimited, Inc.</unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
     </did>
    </c02>

    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">20</container>
      <unittitle>Correspondence and legal papers concerning merger and formation of new,
       consolidated organization to be known as the "New York Conservation Council and the American
       Game Association Foundation, Inc.," </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1969 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">20</container>
      <unittitle>Scientific bulletins on fish and game subjects </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive"/>
     </did>
    </c02>
   </c01>

   <c01 level="series">
    <did>
     <unittitle>International Association of Game, Fish and Conservation Commissioners, </unittitle>
     <unitdate type="inclusive">1912-1942</unitdate>
    </did>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">21</container>
      <unittitle> Proceedings of Annual Meetings (some missing, 23 volumes), </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1912-1946 </unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">22</container>
      <unittitle>Proceedings of Annual Meetings (1953 missing, 23 volumes), </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1947-1970</unitdate>
     </did>
    </c02>
   </c01>

   <c01 level="series">
    <did>
     <unittitle><title render="italic">Field &amp; Stream</title> Motion Pictures of Hunting and
      Fishing, </unittitle>
     <unitdate type="inclusive">1924-1931</unitdate>
    </did>
    <scopecontent>
     <p>Positive prints of 16 mm., silent, black and white, documentary motion pictures of field
      sports taken during editorship of Field &amp;Stream magazine by Holland in 1920s. The
      films are each held in metal cannisters. </p>
    </scopecontent>

    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">23</container>
      <unittitle><title render="doublequote">'Battery' Shooting on Currituck Sound,</title> (F &amp;S film shot at Currituck
       Sound, North Carolina, directed by Holland and photographed by Harold McCracken. 13:15 min.
       running time) </unittitle>
     </did>
    </c02>

    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">23</container>
      <unittitle><title render="doublequote">Canoe Trails Through Goose Land,</title> (Produced by the Canadian Government Motion
       Picture Bureau, Ottawa, Canada. 11:40 min.) </unittitle>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">23</container>
      <unittitle><title render="doublequote">Goose Hunting at Chesapeake City,</title> (F &amp;S film shot at Carpenter estate
       near Chesapeake City, Md. and Carpenter's Dilwyne Kennels near Montchanin, Del., directed and
       edited by R. R. M. Carpenter and Eltinge F. Warner. 15 :05 min.)</unittitle>
     </did><scopecontent><p>DVD master and viewing copy available, created July 2010.</p></scopecontent>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">23</container>
      <unittitle><title render="doublequote">Gun Dogs,</title> (F &amp;S film shot at Rowcliffe Game Farm, Millbrook, N.Y.,
       directed and edited by Warner and Holland. 15:00 min.)</unittitle>
     </did>
    </c02>

    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">23</container>
      <unittitle><title render="doublequote">Hunting the Hun,</title> (F &amp; S film of hunting Hungarian partridges in
       Saskatchewan province, Canada, directed and photographed by Holland. 14:20 min.) 5A. Second
       copy; 5B, same except for title, <title render="doublequote">On the Northern Prairies.</title> </unittitle>
     </did>
    </c02>

    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">23</container>
      <unittitle><title render="doublequote">Rocky Mountain Rainbows,</title> (F &amp;S film shot in Rocky Mountains but with no
       information about direction. 16:00 min.) </unittitle>
     </did>
    </c02>

    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">23</container>
      <unittitle><title render="doublequote">A Mooseback in the Miramachi,</title> (F &amp;S film shot at the Miramachi River in
       New Brunswick province, Canada, photographed by John Alexander, edited and titled by Terry
       Ramsaye and directed by B. E. Norrish. 11:00 min.) </unittitle>
     </did>
    </c02>

    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">23</container>
      <unittitle><title render="doublequote">Mountain Meadow Trout,</title> (F &amp;S film at Jack Creek in the Tobacco Root
       Mountains, Montana, photographed by Dan Holland and Henry Deremus. 13:15 min.) </unittitle>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">23</container>
      <unittitle><title render="doublequote">The 'Irishman' Does His Stuff,</title> (F &amp;S film shot at Remington Gun Club
       grounds, Lordship, Connecticut. No information about direction. 13:40 min.) </unittitle>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">23</container>
      <unittitle><title render="doublequote">Hunting Prairie Chickens in Saskatchewan,</title> (F &amp;S film shot in Saskatchewan
       province, Canada, photographed by Harold McCracken of Ray Holland. 14:00 min) 3 prints, 10A,
       10B, and 10C.</unittitle>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">23</container>
      <unittitle><title render="doublequote">Saskatchewan Ducks,</title> (F &amp;S film shot in Saskatchewan province, Canada,
       photographed by Harold McCracken of Ray Holland, George Lidster and Harry Shedd. 15:05 min.)
      </unittitle>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">23</container>
      <unittitle><title render="doublequote">The Square Tails of Drowning River,</title> (F &amp;S film shot north of Nipigon,
       northern Ontario province, Canada, directed by S. E. "Canuck" Sangster, photographed and
       edited by Harold McCracken. 15:55 min.) </unittitle>
     </did>
    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">23</container>
      <unittitle><title render="doublequote">The Silver Rainbow,</title> (F &amp; S film shot at Sun Valley Idaho, directed and
       edited by Holland, editor, and Dan Holland, fishing editor, Field &amp; Stream. 13:45
       min. )</unittitle>
     </did>
    </c02>


   </c01>

   <c01 level="series">
    <did>
     <unittitle>Wildlife Art, </unittitle>
     <unitdate type="inclusive">1939-1944</unitdate>
    </did>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">25</container>
      <unittitle><title render="doublequote">Green-Wing Teal</title> by Lynn Bogue Hunt. Framed pencil sketch of a male and female
       teal standing at a marsh edge, with five teal in the background descending for a landing.
       This was used as the central design for the 1939-1940 Migratory Bird Hunting Stamp, issued by
       the U.S. Department of the Interior. </unittitle>
     </did>

     <accessrestrict>

      <p>[Missing as of January 1999.]</p>

     </accessrestrict>

    </c02>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <container type="Box">25</container>
      <unittitle><title render="doublequote">Game Birds of America,</title> a portfolio of 12 paintings by Lynn Bogue Hunt, with
       descriptive text by Holland. <title render="italic">Field &amp; Stream</title> Publishing
       Co., </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1944</unitdate>
     </did>

     <accessrestrict>

      <p>[Missing as of January 1999.]</p>

     </accessrestrict>

    </c02>
   </c01>

   <c01 level="series">
    <did>
     <unittitle><title render="italic">Field &amp; Stream</title>, </unittitle>
     <unitdate type="inclusive">1924-1944</unitdate>
    </did>
    <c02>
     <did>
      <unittitle><title render="italic">Field &amp; Stream</title> magazine, published monthly.
       34 bound volumes, complete for Holland editorship. </unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive">1924-1941 </unitdate>
     </did>

     <accessrestrict>

      <p>[Missing as of January 1999.]</p>

     </accessrestrict>

    </c02>
   </c01>

  </dsc>

 </archdesc>
</ead>
