B Y R O B E R T W. A R N O L D I I I
archives around
NewYork regarded wild animals
as either food or foe
and exterminated them at an
appalling rate. Food animals
such as passenger pigeons
were slaughtered with no real
idea that they could vanish
entirely; the world's last
passenger pigeon died in a zoo
in 1914. The extermination
of other species, however,
particularly alpha predators
such as panthers, bears, and
wolves, was assisted by the
payment of bounties.
From colonial times until
within modern memory, many
New York communities paid
bounties on "pest animals"
killed for public benefit.
Where the state was sparsely
populated and agricultural,
such animals were viewed as
predators that took domestic
animals, ravaged crops, or
made life dangerous for settlers,
and were therefore impediments
to survival.
The wolf, cougar
hawks, wildcats, foxes,
crows, rats, lynx, blackbirds,
and probably other animals
were all bountied.
Clinton County was still paying
wolf bounties in the early
1820s, and Montgomery
County's Board of Supervisors
resolved to "allow the sum of
fifteen dollars for every full
grown wolf killed in this county
and the sum of seven dollars
and fifty cents for any wolf
whelp killed within the same."
As settlers pushed into western
New York, Chautauqua County
wolves in 1815 "were as
plenty [sic] as black-berries in
harvest." At that time, wool
was a lucrative farm product
that provided uniforms for the
armies of the Napoleonic Wars,
and sheep farming increased
in response to this demand.
Wolves were a threat to the
valuable sheep, so the county
increased its appropriation for
wolf bounties, but by 1820 the
county supervisors petitioned
the state to have the bounty
reduced because there were
so few wolves left. The last
wolf was killed there in 1841.
In more modern times,
the bounty on a rattlesnake
in Essex County during the
Depression was one dollar; on
a hawk, half that. This was
money much-needed by locals,
some of whom evidently
became at least part-time
bounty hunters. In November
1935, the county paid bounties
on thirty-five rattlesnakes and
seventeen hawks. The warm
months, when the snakes
were on the move, proved the
most lucrative. In mid-August
of 1930, H.M. Lawrence was
paid for thirty-seven rattlesnake
rattles, and Francis Kelly
was paid for eighteen rattles
in September 1939, although
most bounty payouts recorded
in the Essex County Clerk's
Office were for one to three
animals. While men were
usually collectors of bounties,
in 1933 one Lavina Lewis was
paid for two hawks.
Since 1983, the timber
rattler has been a threatened
species—not entirely due to
bounty hunting, but certainly
not helped by it.
Minutes of the Ulster County
Board of Supervisors indicate
that the county paid bounties
on 232 wolves between 1711
and 1731. A bounty was also
paid on whelps, the young of
wolves. As late as 1793, the
board of supervisors paid a
bounty on a panther. At the
other end of the pest chain
was the squirrel. In 1793, “the
Freeholders and Inhabitants
of the Town of Rensselaerville
[Albany County] Resolved
unanimously that one penny
be allowed for every Squirrel’s
Scalp, of any Squirrel kind
which shall be killed... .”
Honest bounty hunting
could be lucrative, at least
when taking alpha predators
like cougars. In Chenango
County in 1802, Daniel Buck
paid for his farm with bounty
money: $60 for each wolf and
$75 for each panther. In a
single year, Buck killed eleven
panthers at a time when land
in New York State sold for
two dollars an acre. However,
in a cash-scarce rural economy,
bounty money raised temptation:
in 1820 in Chautauqua
County, a certificate was
issued for a full-grown wolf
that was later determined to
have been caught as a whelp,
raised until fully grown, and
then killed in order to collect
the twice-larger bounty paid
for adult animals.
Physical evidence of a kill
had to be presented, and to
receive payment hunters had
to swear that these animals
had been killed within town
limits. When a squirrel scalp
was submitted, for example,
the appropriate town officer
immediately clipped off its
ears and burned them so that
the same scalp could not be
submitted again by ethically
challenged citizens. A certificate
was then signed, and the town
supervisors, who collectively
formed the county’s board of
supervisors, paid the bounties
from town funds, to be
reimbursed by the county.
However, sometimes the rules
got broken. In Essex County
rattlesnakes were a threat,
and a higher bounty was paid
for them than in neighboring
Warren County, leading to
the occasional bounty-jumper
crossing the county line to
collect. Rattlesnakes also
regenerate their rattles, so
enterprising citizens would
keep snakes alive, repeatedly
trim off the rattles, and
submit them for payment
As times changed, so did
the outlook on the environment
and the appreciation of
the ecological roles of various
species. Bounties were outlawed
in New York State in the
early 1970s, and efforts have
been made—sometimes hotly
opposed in public debate—
to re-establish populations of
some formerly bounty-hunted
predators. Today, research
and sensitivities look upon
pest animals as occupants of
important environmental
niches, or as helpful predators
that eliminate true pests such
as rats and mice, or simply as
prey themselves in the natural
food chainBounty Hunting in New York
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