Here’s what seeing bears at National Parks looked like 90 years ago - The Washington Post
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Here’s what seeing bears at National Parks looked like 90 years ago

May 16, 2016 at 7:00 a.m. EDT

Sometime this year, take a moment to say “happy birthday” to the National Parks Service. It’s turning 100 years old in August. And my, how some things have changed in that century.

Take, for example, how the parks deal with bears.

Today, the Park Service characterizes the possibility of seeing live bears — black, grizzly or polar in dozens of parks across the country — as a very special but far from guaranteed experience. It reminds park visitors that bears are wild animals, and it directs them to follow “bear etiquette.” That code of conduct includes the following exhortations:

  • Respect a bear’s space.
  • Never approach, crowd, pursue or displace bears.
  • Let bears eat their natural foods.

It was not always so, as seen in the photos below. In the early 20th century, according to Rachel Mazur’s book “Speaking of Bears,” bear-feeding spectacles were major attractions.

In Sequoia National Park, managers noticed that bears foraged nightly at a garbage dump inside the park, and they knew a tourist draw when they saw one. So they moved the trash pit to a more central location and called it “Bear Hill.” Bleachers were set up so that hundreds of visitors, separated from the bears by only a short barrier, could watch as many as 30 of the animals dine each evening. (“There were a lot of injuries during those years, but it was before society became litigious,” Mazur wrote.)

Visitors to Yosemite National Park could see bears eat on a specially constructed platform that was illuminated by floodlights at night. Several other parks also had bear pits, Mazur wrote, and future president Gerald Ford worked for a time as an armed guard on a bear-feeding truck at Yellowstone National Park. By the 1930s, calls to stop feeding the bears grew as the trash-nourished population swelled and more human-bear run-ins occurred. But it would take decades — and many killings of “nuisance bears” — for the Park Service to arrive at its current view that it is best to stay out of bears’ way and lock human food in bear-proof containers.

Here’s Horace Albright, the superintendent of Yellowstone, picnicking with bears in 1922. Albright later became the director of the Park Service, and he opposed the closure of the bear-feeding pits:

Tourists watched bears eating at this garbage incinerator in the 1930s at Sequoia and Kings Canyon national parks:

Here’s a bear-feeding wagon at Yellowstone, probably sometime before 1920:

Bears chowed down at a feeding platform in Yellowstone in 1939:

Tourists watched bears eat at Yellowstone, sometime between the 1890s and 1910:

Enid Michael, a National Park Service ranger-naturalist, danced with a bear at Yosemite in the 1920s:

This 1933 photo, taken by former National Parks photographer George A. Grant in Yellowstone, was called “Bear artist with bear”:

A bear-feeding platform in Yellowstone, about 1929:

Bears being fed from a garbage truck in Yellowstone:

Read more:

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You remember Cecil the lion. But will you recall Scarface, the slain grizzly?

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