Grizzly bear returns to California
SANTA MARIA NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM UNVEILS NEW EXHIBIT
The last known California grizzly bear was killed in 1922 in
Tulare County near Yosemite National Park.
But visitors to the Santa Maria Natural History Museum can
get a glimpse of the fearsome figure that adorns the state
flag in a new exhibit on loan from Napa Valley.
"This bear is from Canada and it was donated to the museum,"
said Clarence Rusconi, a docent in the Santa Maria museum.
"They're a lot bigger than the black bears that are in the hills
around here up toward Cuyama."
The bear shares a room with a California tule elk that has
lived at the museum for many years.
The museum is hosting a Fall Equinox mixer Thursday from
5 to 7:30 p.m. to show off the new exhibit.
The grizzly bear has been as tightly linked with California as a
mother bear and her cub for as long as humans have lived in
the Golden State.
Native tribes worshiped the grizzly for its strength, beauty and
majesty when the massive bears thrived in California's valleys
and foothills. When the trickle of Spanish explorers turned into
a flood of Mexican and white settlers pouring into California, it
marked the beginning of the bears' last stand.
Although white settlers used the bear as a symbol in their battle
for independence from Mexico in the Bear Flag Revolt of 1846,
they killed the bears by the hundreds. Less than 75 years after
gold was discovered in the Sierra Nevada foothills, every grizzly
bear in the state had been hunted down or trapped and killed.
One of the trappers, James Cappen "Grizzly" Adams, became an
early California legend. Although he was known for trapping and
hunting hundreds of the ferocious bears, he also raised young
cubs as pets and was known for walking the streets of San
Francisco with his longtime pet, Ben Franklin, according to reports.
The grizzly at the Santa Maria museum is smaller and darker
than the typical California grizzly — ursus arctos californicus.
One of the largest grizzlies on record, a 2,200-pounder, was
killed near Valley Center in 1886.
The Santa Maria exhibit comes to the museum from the Mondavi
family of the Napa Valley. It depicts a bear over the partially
buried body of another grizzly.
"The museum is very grateful to the Marc Mondavi Family
and David Hoxsey for making the new exhibit possible,"
said exhibit committee member Virginia Souza.
Another attraction new to the museum is the Bird Hall,
a roomful of birds indigenous to the area.
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