New Mexico Ornithological Society
Florence
Merriam Bailey Lifetime Achievement Award
Florence Merriam Bailey – ornithologist
Florence
Augusta Merriam Bailey (1863-1948), whom we honor with our NMOS Florence
Merriam Bailey Lifetime Achievement Award, was a woman of “firsts.” She was the first woman associate member of
the American Ornithologists’ Union (AOU) (1885), the first woman elected as a
Fellow of the AOU (1929), and the first woman recipient of the AOU’s William Brewster Memorial Award (1931). She was also a member of the Cooper
Ornithological Club, the Wilson Ornithological Club, and the National Audubon
Society.
Florence was born 8 August 1863 in Locust Grove, New York,
the youngest of three children of Clinton Levi and Caroline (Hart)
Merriam. She was educated at a private
school in Utica, New York,
and attended Smith College in Northampton,
Massachusetts, from 1882 to 1886,
although she did not receive a degree. Smith College
later granted her a B.A. in 1921. Florence acquired her
interest in natural history, and particularly ornithology, early from her
father and her brother Clinton Hart Merriam who later became the first chief of
the U.S. Biological Survey, the predecessor of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service. While in college, largely in
response to the threats posed to birds by their harvest for the women’s hat
industry, she organized The Smith College Audubon Society and was very active
in protesting these practices. She also
began writing articles for the Audubon
Magazine. At 26 years of age, and
refusing to use a man’s nom de plume as women writers frequently did at that
time, she revised and published a series of these articles in her first book Birds Through an
Opera Glass (1889).
Soon
after college she developed tuberculosis, resulting in a series of western
trips to “take the cure” in southern California,
Utah, and Arizona.
In addition to improved health, these trips resulted in three more
books–My Summer in a Mormon Village
(1896), A-Birding on a Bronco (1896),
and Birds of Village and Field
(1898). This last book was written for
beginning ornithologists and became one of the first popular American bird
guides, including simple field keys for identification and illustrations by
Ernest Thompson Seton, Louis Agassiz Fuertes, and John L. Ridgway. Following these travels, she moved to Washington, D.C.
to live with her brother Hart. There she
met Vernon Bailey (1864-1942) who had been hired by her brother as a naturalist
for the Biological Survey. They were
married on 16 December 1899 and made their home in Washington, D.C. Florence
frequently accompanied Vernon on his Biological
Survey field trips to the West where he collected and studied mammals, birds,
reptiles, and plants, and Florence
observed the birds. They explored New Mexico systematically and, over the next 30 years,
also worked in Texas, California,
Arizona, the Pacific Northwest, and the Dakotas. Florence published about
100 articles in ornithological journals, such as The Auk, Bird-Lore, and The Condor, and authored 10 books. Among these books was Handbook of Birds of the Western United States (1902) with 600
pages and about as many illustrations.
Additional recognition came to Florence
when Joseph Grinnell named a subspecies of Mountain Chickadee–Parus gambeli baileyae (now Poecile gambeli baileyae)–in her
honor (1908).

Florence was a founding member of the Audubon Society of
the District of Columbia
and was an active promoter of the society, its publication projects, and the
bird classes it organized to provide basic instruction in field and laboratory
ornithology to teachers of nature study.
In
1916, Professor Wells W. Cooke died before completing a project to publish on
the birdlife of New Mexico. Dr. E. W. Nelson, then chief of the
Biological Survey, asked Florence
to complete the volume. Based on her
knowledge of western birds and her experiences with her husband thoroughly surveying
the biological resources of New
Mexico, she completed Birds of New Mexico, published by the New Mexico Department of Game
and Fish in 1928. She received the AOU’s William Brewster Memorial Award for this publication
and soon after received an honorary LL.D. degree from the University of New Mexico
in recognition of the value of her work.
Her
final major work was titled Among the
Birds in the Grand Canyon National Park, published in 1939 by the National
Park Service when she was past age 75.
Vernon Bailey retired from the Biological Survey in 1933 and they
continued to live in Washington,
D.C. Vernon died in
1942 and Florence
died six years later on 22 September 1948 at the age of 85.
RESOURCES FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION
Chapman, F.M.
1916. Florence Merriam Bailey. Bird-Lore 18:142-144.
Fischer, D.L. 2001.
Early Southwest Ornithologists, 1528-1900. University
of Arizona Press, Tucson.
Kofalk, H. 1989. No Woman Tenderfoot: Florence Merriam Bailey, Pioneer
Naturalist. Texas
A & M University
Press, College Station.
Ligon, J.S. 1961. New Mexico Birds
and Where to Find Them. University
of New Mexico Press,
Albuquerque.
Oehser, P.H. 1952. In memoriam: Florence Merriam Bailey. The Auk 69:19-26.
St. Lawrence County, New
York Branch, American Association of University
Women. Women of Courage, Florence
Merriam Bailey: Pioneer Naturalist. Online (available at
http://www.northnet.org/ stlawrenceaauw/bailey.htm).
[Ruth,
J.M. 2007. Florence
Merriam Bailey – Ornithologist. NMOS Bulletin 35: 97-100.]
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
NMOS FLORENCE MERRIAM BAILEY
LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
The New Mexico Ornithological
Society recognizes those individuals who have made a significant lifetime
contribution to: New Mexico’s
ornithological knowledge; the promotion of the value of birds, both aesthetic
and economic; effective conservation of the state’s avifauna; and/or the New
Mexico Ornithological Society.
Nominations for the award can be
submitted by any interested individual(s) and will be accepted at any time.
Nominations should be submitted to the current NMOS President or Secretary (see
inside front cover).
The Florence Merriam Bailey Lifetime Achievement Awards Committee
may seek additional information about the nominee from the person(s) who
submitted the original nomination. The
Awards Committee will review the nomination and determine by majority vote if,
in their opinion, a nominee meets the above criteria. The decision of the committee is final. Upon recommendation of the Awards Committee,
awards will be presented at the NMOS annual meeting.
Florence M. Bailey Award
Nomination Form
Previous Lifetime
Achievement Awardees
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still under construction.]
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