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249 NOTES 1. Where there is any chance of confusion over a species’ identification, I have provided the scientific name. 2. Gifford Pinchot, Just Fishing Talk (New York and Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Telegraph Press, 1936), 163-64, cited in John F. Reiger, “Gifford Pinchot with Rod and Reel”/“Trading Places: From Historian to Environmental Activist”—Two Essays in Conservation History (Milford, Pennsylvania: Grey Towers Press, 1994), 10-11. 3. Aldo Leopold, Round River: From the Journals of Aldo Leopold. Edited by Luna B. Leopold (Minocqua, Wisconsin: NorthWord Press, 1991), 186. First published in 1953. 4. Ibid., 245. 5. Samuel R. Slaymaker II, Five Miles Away: The Story of the Lawrenceville School (Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1985), 216. 6. In later years the Corps of Engineers tried to undo some of the damage it had done earlier by restoring the marshes, and it has been fairly successful in this effort. 7. Richard H. Pough, Audubon Water Bird Guide: Water, Game and Large Land Birds (Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company, 1951), 206. 8. Frank C. Bellrose, Ducks, Geese & Swans of North America (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Stackpole Books, 1976), 40. 9. Albert Fein, Frederick Law Olmsted and the American Environmental Tradition (New York: George Braziller, 1972), 168. 10.Joy Schaverien, “Boarding School: The Trauma of the ‘Privileged’ Child,” Journal of Analytical Psychology, Vol. 49 (2004), 684. 11.Ibid., 686. 12.I am grateful to Thomas L. Altherr and Wiley C. Prewitt, Jr., for bringing this important phrase, and concept, from Faulkner to my attention. 13.Curt Meine, Aldo Leopold: His Life and Work (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1988), 526. 14.Robert A. McCabe, Aldo Leopold: The Professor (Madison, Wisconsin: Rusty Rock Press, 1987), 124. 15.Pough, Audubon Water Bird Guide, 105. 16.McCabe, Aldo Leopold, 124. Escaping into Nature 250 17.Mark Cioc, The Game of Conservation: International Treaties to Protect the World’s Migratory Animals (Athens: Ohio University Press, 2009), 63 and 65. 18.John F. Reiger, American Sportsmen and the Origins of Conservation. Third, revised and expanded, edition (Corvallis: Oregon State University Press, 2001), 194-95. 19.Thomas R. Dunlap, “Sport Hunting and Conservation, 1880-1920,” Environmental Review, Vol. 12 (Spring, 1988), 58. For my response, see “John F. Reiger’s Commentary on Thomas R. Dunlap’s Article, ‘Sport Hunting and Conservation, 1880-1920’,” ibid. (Fall, 1988), 94-96. 20.McCabe, Aldo Leopold, 124. 21.Richard E. McCabe to Reiger, e-mail of June 29, 2006. 22.Proceedings of the Fourth Annual Governor’s Symposium on North America’s Hunting Heritage (Minnetonka, Minnesota: Wildlife Forever, 1995), 10-13. 23. On page 191 of American Sportsmen and the Origins of Conservation (2001), I incorrectly stated that Aldo addressed this letter to his father. ...

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