4.8 • 748 Ratings
🗓️ 20 January 2020
⏱️ 31 minutes
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In the 1930s the world's best-known conservationist was an ex-trapper named Grey Owl who wrote and lectured ardently for the preservation of the Canadian wilderness. At his death, though, it was discovered that he wasn't who he'd claimed to be. In this week's episode of the Futility Closet podcast we'll tell the story of his curious history and complicated legacy.
We'll also learn how your father can be your uncle and puzzle over a duplicate record.
Intro:
Dutch engineer Theo Jansen builds sculptures that walk.
Helen Fouché Gaines' 1956 cryptanalysis textbook ends with a cipher that "nobody has ever been able to decrypt."
Sources for our feature on Grey Owl:
Donald B. Smith, From the Land of Shadows: The Making of Grey Owl, 2000.
Albert Braz, Apostate Englishman: Grey Owl the Writer and the Myths, 2015.
Jane Billinghurst, Grey Owl: The Many Faces of Archie Belaney, 1999.
Allison Mitcham, Grey Owl's Favorite Wilderness Revisited, 1991.
Lovat Dickson, Wilderness Man: The Strange Story of Grey Owl, 1973.
Anahareo, Devil in Deerskins: My Life With Grey Owl, 1972.
James Polk, Wilderness Writers, 1972.
Brian Bethune, "Truth and Consequences," Maclean's 112:40 (Oct. 4, 1999), 58.
Kenneth Brower, "Grey Owl," Atlantic 265:1 (January 1990), 74-84.
Trent Frayne, "Grey Owl the Magnificent Fraud," Maclean's 64 (Aug. 1, 1951), 14-16, 37-39.
Dane Lanken, "The Vision of Grey Owl," Canadian Geographic 119:2 (March/April 1999), 74-80.
Fenn Stewart, "Grey Owl in the White Settler Wilderness: 'Imaginary Indians' in Canadian Culture and Law," Law, Culture and the Humanities 14:1 (Oct. 8, 2014), 161-181.
Kevin Young, "Cowboys & Aliens," Kenyon Review 39:6 (November/December 2017), 10-32.
David Chapin, "Gender and Indian Masquerade in the Life of Grey Owl," American Indian Quarterly 24:1 (Winter 2000), 91-109.
John Hayman, "Grey Owl's Wild Goose Chase," History Today 44:1 (January 1994), 42.
Mark Collin Reid, "Grey Owl," Canada's History 95:5 (October/November 2015), 14-15.
Donald B. Smith, "Belaney, Archibald Stansfeld [called Grey Owl]," Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Sept. 23, 2004.
Donald B. Smith, "Belaney, Archibald Stansfeld, Known as Grey Owl and Wa-sha-quon-asin," in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, Vol. 16, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003 (accessed Jan. 5, 2020).
Donald B. Smith, "Archibald Belaney, Grey Owl," The Canadian Encyclopedia, June 17, 2008 (accessed Jan. 5, 2020).
Susan Griffith, "Grey Owl: Champion of the Canadian Wilderness," Independent, Nov. 12, 2015.
Jane Onyanga-Omara, "Grey Owl: Canada's Great Conservationist and Imposter," BBC News, Sept. 19, 2013.
James H. Marsh, "Grey Owl's Great Deception," CanWest News, Sept. 17, 2003, 1.
Tony Lofaro, "Why I Kept Grey Owl's Secret," Ottawa Citizen, Sept. 21, 1999, D3.
Peter Unwin, "The Fabulations of Grey Owl," The Beaver 79:2 (April 1999), 13-19.
Henrietta Smyth, "Grey Owl Returns to England," North Bay [Ont.] Nugget, April 3, 1999, B1.
"Grey Owl," New York Times, April 17, 1938.
"Service Honors Grey Owl," New York Times, April 16, 1938.
"Grey Owl, Worker for Conservation," New York Times, April 14, 1938.
"Doctor and Nurse to Beavers in Canada Is Indian Grey Owl," New York Times, June 24, 1934.
"Do You Know?", Roanoke Rapids [N.C.] Herald, Nov. 24, 1932, 2.
Listener mail:
Roger Schlueter, "Getting a Bone Marrow Transplant Could Give You New DNA, Too," Belleville [Ill.] News-Democrat, Jan. 16, 2018.
"She's Her Own Twin," ABC News, Aug. 15, 2006.
Wikipedia, "Lydia Fairchild" (accessed Jan. 8, 2020).
Wikipedia, "Chimera (Genetics)" (accessed Jan. 9, 2020).
Jessica Richardson, "Man Fails Paternity Test Due to Passing on Unborn Twin's DNA," BioNews, Nov. 2, 2015.
Alice Park, "How a Man's Unborn Twin Fathered His Child," Time, Oct. 28, 2015.
Heather Murphy, "When a DNA Test Says You're a Younger Man, Who Lives 5,000 Miles Away," New York Times, Dec. 7, 2019.
Heather Murphy, "The Case of a Man With Two Sets of DNA Raises More Questions," New York Times, Dec. 12, 2019.
Carl Zimmer, "In the Marmoset Family, Things Really Do Appear to Be All Relative," New York Times, March 27, 2007.
This week's lateral thinking puzzle was contributed by listener Paul Kapp.
You can listen using the player above, download this episode directly, or subscribe on Google Podcasts, on Apple Podcasts, or via the RSS feed at https://futilitycloset.libsyn.com/rss.
Please consider becoming a patron of Futility Closet -- you can choose the amount you want to pledge, and we've set up some rewards to help thank you for your support. You can also make a one-time donation on the Support Us page of the Futility Closet website.
Many thanks to Doug Ross for the music in this episode.
If you have any questions or comments you can reach us at [email protected]. Thanks for listening!
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Welcome to the Futility Closet Podcast, forgotten stories from the pages of history. |
0:14.9 | Visit us online to sample more than 11,000 quirky curiosities from walking sculptures to an unsolved cipher. This is episode 281. I'm Greg |
0:24.4 | Ross. And I'm Sharon Ross. In the 1930s, the world's best-known conservationist was an ex-trapper named |
0:31.1 | Grey Owl, who wrote and lectured ardently for the preservation of the Canadian wilderness. |
0:36.1 | At his death, though, it was discovered that he |
0:38.2 | wasn't who he'd claimed to be. In today's show, we'll tell the story of his curious history and |
0:43.5 | complicated legacy. We'll also learn how your father can be your uncle and puzzle over a duplicate record. |
1:04.0 | On the E of November 9th, 1936, a tall, hawk-faced man stood up before a crowd of 1700 at the King Edward Hotel in Toronto. He was dressed in buckskins and wore his long hair |
1:10.0 | in braids. In a deep voice, he told them, |
1:13.0 | Canada's greatest asset today is her forest lands. In my latest book, I have attacked the average |
1:17.8 | Canadian's ignorance of his own country. He is prouder of skyscrapers on Young Street and the |
1:22.6 | price of hogs. He can have those any time, but we can't replace the natural resources we are destroying as fast as we can. |
1:29.8 | He called for an end to the plundering of the wilderness, one of Canada's most precious resources. |
1:34.8 | He was called Gray Owl, and he knew his subject from direct experience. He had himself spent years |
1:40.1 | as a trapper in the northern forest until an arresting experience in the spring of 1928. He had just trapped and killed a mother beaver when he heard the crying of her two |
1:49.2 | kits. He had found them and was preparing to shoot them when his wife, Anna Harrio, begged him to |
1:54.4 | spare them, and at her insistence he agreed to take them home. In the year that followed, |
1:58.9 | they won him over. He wrote, they seemed to be almost like |
2:01.7 | little folk from some other planet, whose language we could not yet quite understand. To kill such |
2:06.8 | creatures seemed monstrous. I would do no more of it. Instead of persecuting them further, I would |
2:11.4 | study them, see just what there really was to them. I perhaps could start a colony of my own. These |
2:16.6 | animals could not be permitted to pass |
... |
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