Aside from the fact that buffaloes (Bison bison bison) were at
least moderately numerous in the region embraced by
Yellowstone when this became our first national park in 1872,
we know little of the early history of those animals in this
region. This is not strange when we remember that there were
still millions of buffaloes roaming at large in their native
haunts. The supply as yet seemed inexhaustible. The early
explorers and visitors were attracted here by the expressions
of nature in the hot springs, geysers, and other natural
wonders. It was natural that only their impressions and
interpretation of the unique were written. Upon verification
by the Geological Survey that such geologic phenomena really
existed here, this area was set aside as a national park in
order that it might be preserved in its natural state by the
government for the "benefit and enjoyment" of all the people,
forever. The thought of making Yellowstone a game preserve was
incidental to the main issue.
From the time of
discovery until 1886 hunting was deemed essential to the
success of any expedition to this remote area. Market hunters
were well established in the northern section of the park as
early as 1873. The first superintendent, N. P. Langford,
recommended that hunting be restricted to the needs of
residents of the park and its visitors, but for want of any
salary he was prevented from residing here and seriously
checking these activities during his five year term.
In the pioneering
venture of creating a national park, Congress overlooked the
item of providing money for administration and protection;
consequently for a period of five years no government funds
were available and hunters had things pretty much their own
way in Yellowstone. When money was first appropriated in 1877,
the beginning of the end was in sight for the buffalo. At this
time Superintendent Norris stated that thousands of hides had
been taken out and that it was the practice of the hunters to
poison the carcasses which were left as bait for wolf and
wolverine. He predicted correctly that within the decade
buffaloes would become extinct or exceedingly rare outside of
this government area. It was estimated that there were three
or four hundred head of the "curly, nearly black bison" (1)
left in the park. They were described by Norris as being
"smaller, of lighter color and with horns smaller and less
spreading than those of the bison that formerly inhabited
Colorado." (1). Figgins described the mountain buffalo (Bison
bison haningtoni) as being much lighter in color, "notably in
the head, neck, and forelimbs" (2) than the plains buffalo
(Bison bison bison). Grinnell stated that the "Mountain
Buffalo" (3) was abundant in Yellowstone Park in 1875 and
called attention to the terrible destruction of these animals
for their hides alone. These mountain buffalo were considered
to be more fleet and intelligent than the plains animals.
Their hides were also more valuable as they were darker,
finer, and more curly.
In 1880 Mr. Norris
estimated 600 buffaloes for the park, 300 of which were only
summer residents and having their winter range to the west in
Idaho. The other animals ranged in the eastern and
northeastern section of the park. During the year a game
keeper was employed to assist Mr. Norris in protecting the
buffalo and other animals. By Superintendent's Order the
buffalo was protected in 1879. Montana also provided a
protection law that year.
From 1882 to 1885 we can
learn nothing of the status of the buffalo in Yellowstone.
Reports of slaughter moved Congress to replace civilian
employees with Cavalry troops of the army, the commanding
officers acting as superintendents for a period of 30 years
when the National Park Service of today was created.
Protective work was ineffectual as no suitable court or laws
were provided for offenders. The work of the soldiers was
augmented by civilian scouts acting in the nature of game
wardens.
In 1886 all hunting in
Yellowstone was prohibited by law but no court was provided to
try cases, the only punishment being arrest and expulsion from
the park and confiscation of outfit. This proved to be an
excellent gamble for poachers with cheap outfits when a good
head was worth $400.
Captain Harris estimated
100 buffalo in 1837. The following year he dispatched a patrol
on snowshoes to the winter range with the idea of finding out
how many buffaloes were left. This patrol encountered only
three head. A later patrol in March succeeded in finding signs
of about 100 animals that had wintered in the vicinity of Mary
Mountain. During the following spring several buffaloes were
seen along the Firehole River whose range was thought to
extend across the Madison Plateau to the southwest corner.
Thee total estimate was then raised to 200 head.
Captain Boutelle became
superintendent in 1890. He observed a scarcity of calves and
thought cougars and lions were preying upon them. Sensing the
perilous plight of the buffalo, appeals were sent to the
governors of the states of Wyoming and Idaho for protection of
animals that might drift from the park into these states.
Wyoming enacted a good protection law the same year but Idaho
ignored the request and continued to harbor the most notorious
set of poachers known, in the vicinity of Henrys Lake near the
western border of the park.
From 1891 to 1897
Captain George S. Anderson served as military superintendent.
He noted the activities of the merciless freebooters of Henrys
Lake and learned of several heads being marketed in
surrounding towns at from four to five hundred dollars.
Several arrests were made in this vicinity, but no convictions
were secured. During the winter of 1894 a notorious poacher
from Cooke, Montana was arrested in Hayden Valley with six
hides in possession. Scout Burgess and Sergeant Troike
apprehended him in the act of stalking a small band of
buffaloes. His final conviction was the first under the new
protection law of 1894. A court was established that year in
the park with John W. Meldrum as first United States
Commissioner to try cases and assess penalties.
From 1891 to 1894
Captain Anderson estimated there were 400 buffalo left in the
park when suddenly the estimate dropped to 200. Seventy five
were counted on the west side and reports of many more in
1891. Evidently, the Idaho poachers were quite successful, for
in the year 1896 it was estimated there were only 25 or 30
head left in the entire park, and doubts were expressed that
they could be saved. Attempts were made to capture a few of
them by providing hay in a corral in Hayden Valley but with no
success. Hay was cut and stacked in Pelican Valley in hopes
the buffalo would find it. Winter snows covered it so deeply,
however, that even the scouts could not locate it. Special
money was made available by the War Department in a final
effort to save the buffalo from complete extermination.
Experienced hunters and other mountain men were employed to
assist the scouts and soldiers but their efforts were of no
avail as the damage was nearly complete. Only the carcasses
were left as evidence of the fact that buffalo had inhabited
the southwestern and western sections of the park. Poachers
had reduced the herd to an estimated 22 head by 1902.
With buffalo so near to
extinction, it was decided to import an entirely new herd, and
gradually release some of these animals, thus introducing new
blood into the wild herd. Accordingly, 18 cows were secured
from the Pablo-Allard herd in Montana and delivered by Howard
Eaton. At the same time, 3 bulls were secured from the
Goodnight herd in Texas by C. J. (Buffalo) Jones who was
employed as game warden in charge of buffalo. These animals
were kept in a large enclosed pasture one mile south of
Mammoth until 1907 at which time the herd had grown in number
to 61 head. Three calves were captured from the wild herd and
raised by domestic cows. The pasture proved insufficient to
meet the needs of the ever-increasing herd so a new site was
selected on the present location of the Buffalo Ranch in Lamar
Valley at the mouth of Rose Creek. Here a portion of the
valley bottom was fenced off to protect the wild grasses which
were harvested in the fall for winter feed. The north slopes
of the valley including about 600 acres were fenced for summer
pasture land. Comfortable living quarters were provided for
the buffalo keeper at the present site.
As early as 1908 it was
felt that there were too many bulls in the herd. They were
constantly fighting and endangering the lives of the calves.
In order to relieve the condition, fourteen bulls were
separated from the herd and driven to Mammoth as the first
show herd. Late in the fall they were returned to the main
herd. The practice of maintaining a show herd at Mammoth
continued until 1935 when a more suitable location on Antelope
Creek was selected. Hundreds of thousands of visitors have
thus been benefited; as buffalo could rarely be seen by them
on the inaccessible summer range.
The Lamar herd had grown
until in 1910 it numbered 121 head, 61 males and 60 females.
The original summer pasture proved inadequate so the herd was
turned out each morning to graze. At first they were herded
carefully and driven into the enclosure every two hours in
order to accustom them to being handled. Later they were
herded during the daytime and returned to the pasture at
night. This practice of day herding was continued until 1915
when it was thought to be unnecessary. Since that time, the
herd has gradually reverted to a wild state until today the
Yellowstone buffalo are perhaps fully as wild as the plains
buffalo of old.

In December 1911, just
after the buffaloes were taken from the range where they had
been day herded during the summer, 22 of the younger animals
(15% of the herd) died. Blackleg was at first suspected and
fear of losing the entire herd prompted quick action. The
disease was found to be Hemorrhagic septicemia, a blood
disease for which the entire herd was vaccinated in June of
that year. There was a recurrence of the disease in 1919 when
26 of the buffaloes died in spite of previous vaccinations in
1917 and 1918. A third attack of the disease threatened the
herd of 578 in 1922. Fifty two of the animals died before
serum could be secured from the Bureau of Animal Industry. The
new serum of 1922 proved to be 100% effective in immunizing
buffalo against the disease and from that time until the
present a fresh supply has been available at the Buffalo Ranch
ready for instant use.
In the meantime, the
original wild animals were not molested by poachers. They
ranged widely over the park country east of Yellowstone Lake
and River, so wild that they were seldom seen even by the
scouts or later by the rangers, except when special patrols
were made. Seventy two head were counted in 1916 and 67 in
1917. Since that time there has been a gradual overlapping of
the ranges of the two herds until at the present time they
have thoroughly intermingled. There is still a tendency for
the animals to winter in distinct herds. The main herd at the
Buffalo Ranch is fed hay during the hardest part of the
winter. Another group varying in number to as many as 300
animals, winters in the valleys east of Yellowstone Lake
without artificial feed. During the past two two small herds,
numbering 36 and 35 were separated from the main herd and
turned loose in Hayden Valley and the Lower Geyser Basin,
respectively, in order to reduce the main herd and at the same
time establish the buffalo on his former range. These animals
seem to be doing well in their new locations. Twenty eight
were counted in Hayden Valley in September while thirty were
seen in January in the Lower Geyser Basin.
The early problem of
surplus bulls in the herd was partially met by establishing a
show herd at Mammoth, through live shipments, to public parks
and zoos and to private estates for exhibition purposes. As
early as 1904, attempts were made to rejuvenate the wild herd
with new blood by liberating one of the new bulls in Pelican
Valley. This venture was a failure as the bull was found dead
near Thumb station the following spring. Subsequent attempts
were made to reduce the number of bulls by driving them from
the Buffalo Ranch anticipating that they would join the wild
herd, but fortunately for the wild herd they always returned
to the Ranch. Finally, permission to slaughter and sell the
meat of surplus buffaloes was granted by Congress to park
officials so in the event that live shipments do not balance
the herd against feed and available range, there is always a
way provided for a sound management program. It has been
established that facilities in Yellowstone are adequate for
approximately 1000 buffaloes and for the best interests of the
park as a whole this figure has been adhered to rather closely
during the past few years. In 1918, 66% (44 head) of the male
calves of 1917 and 1918 were castrated during the vaccination
of the herd for Hemorrhagic septicemia. These steers and
others following were slaughtered at the Buffalo Ranch, the
meat in later years having been donated to relief
organizations and Indian agencies in the states bordering the
park. Total live shipments to zoos and reservations from the
park number 1351 to date.
From the small herd of
eighteen cows and three bulls established in Yellowstone in
1902 plus the remnant of the original herd which was
assimilated in later years, the present herds total
approximately 1000 head, while a total of 2182 surplus animals
have been disposed of. Many fine herds have been establish
throughout the country from the Yellowstone surplus.
Under the sound
agreement program of late years, the future of the buffalo in
the park has never been brighter.
References for the above
article:
1. Superintendents'
Annual Reports
2. Figgins, J. A., Bison
of the Western Area of the Mississippi Basin, Vol. XII, p. 30.
3. Grinnell, George Bird
and Ludlow, Captain - A Reconnaissance from Carroll, Montana
to Yellowstone National Park in 1875.