User:Doctree/sandbox/Cordelia Stanwood

Cordelia Stanwood
Born
Cordelia Johnson Stanwood

(1865-08-01)August 1, 1865
DiedNovember 20, 1958(1958-11-20) (aged 93)
Cause of deathcancer
MonumentsStanwood Wildlife Sanctuary
Occupations
Known forOrnithology
Parents
  • Roswell Leland Stanwood
  • Margaret Susan Bown
WebsiteCordelia's Story

Cordelia Johnson Stanwood (August 1, 1865 - November 20, 1958), known to family and friends as Cordie, was an ornithologist, teacher, writer, nature photographer and conservationist. Her work in ornithology was instrumental in the transition from the 19th century practice of collecting specimens to careful observation, documentation and photography in the field during the 20th century. She contributed over a hundred articles about birds to scholarly journals, magazines and newspapers.

Born in Ellsworth, Maine, Stanwood moved to Providence, Rhode Island to live with wealthy relatives until she completed her education as a teacher. She taught in elementary school systems and continued her education from 1887 until 1904 when health problems forced an end to her career as a teacher. After a period in a sanitorium in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, she returned to her family home in Ellsworth, Maine in 1904.

Beginning in 1905, Stanwood began to study the natural habitat around her home. She kept detailed field notes from 1905 through 1953. Most of her efforts concentrated on local birds but she also studied and photographed other wildlife. She contributed to scientific journals and books and corresponded with many prominent scientists and naturalists. To support herself, she sold nature stories and photographs to newspapers and popular magazines. She supplemented her income by selling crafts, most notably hand-woven baskets.

Stanwood was considered eccentric and was known as "Ellsworth's Famous Birdwoman" and "The Lady of Birdacre". She was fiercely independent throughout her life, refusing any form of charity or assistance in spite of living much of her adult life in poverty. Failing health finally forced her to move into a nursing home at the age of 89 supported by the state.

Before her death, Stanwood gave her home and surrounding land and all of her her notebooks, correspondence and photographs to a local birding club named for her. Her home and land were developed into a museum and wildlife sanctuary dedicated to her memory.

Early life and education

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Cordelia Stanwood was born on August 1, 1865, at the Stanwood homestead in Ellsworth, Maine. She was the oldest of five children born to Roswell Leland Stanwood, a sea captain, and Margaret Susan Brown, daughter of a Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia businessman. Roswell Stanwood was already supporting his widowed mother and his three older sisters before the marriage. Cordelia's younger siblings included sisters Maude, Maria and Idella and a brother, Henry.[1] Until Cordelia Stanwood was eight years old, she, her mother and sisters often lived on the ships captained by her father.[2] She was described as a "frail child" who seldom attended school when the family lived in the Stanwood home in Ellsworth.[3] She attended Ellsworth elementary school only intermittently. Her paternal grandmother helped teach her to read in addition to teaching her traditional skills expected of a woman at that time such as knitting and needlework.[4]

The Stanwood family valued education but Ellsworth had no secondary school so in 1879, fourteen year old Cordelia traveled to Providence, Rhode Island to live with her uncle Oliver and aunt Cordelia Johnson, after whom she was named. She was sensitive about being older than the other students when she was enrolled in the Federal Street Grammar School.[5]

Secondary school in Providence was separated into three tracks at the time Stanwood attended: Classical, English and English and Scientific. Students in the classical school were prepared for advancement to college. The English and Scientific track was a vocational school to prepare working class students for jobs in manufacturing and accounting. Stanwood completed the Girls' English track that prepared young women for teaching. Stanwood's classes included mathematics (algebra, geometry and trigonometry), languages (composition, English literature, rhetoric, Latin and French), philosophy, history and sciences (botany and chemistry).[6] Stanwood overcame her inadequate early education to graduate sixth in a class of sixty from the Girl's High School of Providence in 1886.[7]

While residing in Providence, Stanwood attended services at the First Baptist Church with her uncle and aunt. She went to Sunday school classes taught by professors from Brown University. When she was 17, Stanwood became a member of the church and continued to send small contributions to the church until at least 1932. Due to the influences of the church and her uncle and aunt, Stanwood maintained a high standard of personal conduct throughout her life.[8]

Higher education and teaching

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Stanwood wanted a career and to live independently. Teaching was one of the few occupations open to women in the late 19th century. After graduating from high school, Stanwood returned to her home in Ellsworth to try for a teaching position. She was not selected to teach in the Ellsworth school but she did help her former Sunday school teacher with Sunday school and was tutored in French in return for her work.[9]

In 1887, Stanwood returned to Providence, Rhode Island, as a teacher-in-training at the Messer Street Teacher Training School. For the next 17 years, she taught at various schools in...

In the fall of 1893, Stanwood enrolled in the Massachusetts Normal Art School to [10]

In autumn of 1904, Stanwood cited ill health as the reason for her resignation from the school system in Marion, Massachusetts. She checked herself into the Adams-Nervine Asylum, a mental health hospital.[11] The contemporary diagnosis was neurasthenia, now interpreted as a nervous breakdown.[12]

Ornithology

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Alder Flycatcher nest

Between 1910 and 1917, Stanwood published twenty studies of different bird species in the Wilson Bulletin, The Auk, Bird Lore, the Maine Journal of Ornithology[Note 1] and Nature.[13][14]

Stanwood's first published work was titled The Hermit Thrush: the Voice of the Northern Woods.[15]

Published ornithological works
  • Clever Builders: Nest and Young of the Bay-Breasted Warbler, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (December 1909), pp. 103-110
  • My First Record of the Goldfinch in 1910, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (March 1910)
  • The Nest and Young of the Alder Flycatcher, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (March 1910) pp. 1, 3-5
  • The Hermit Thrush; The Voice of the Northern Woods, Bird-Lore 12 (May 1910)
  • A Lowly Home: Nest and Young of the Nashville Warbler, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (June 1910)
  • The Black-Throated Green Warbler, The Auk Vol. 27 (July 1910), pp. 289-294
  • The Green Black-Capped Warbler in Ellsworth, Maine, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (September 1910)
  • The Winter Wren In Ellsworth, Maine, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (September 1910)
  • How a Baby Vireo Came to Have His Picture Taken, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (September 1910) pp. 45-47
  • A Series of Nests of the Magnolia Warbler, The Auk Vol. 27 (December 1910), pp. 384-389
  • The Black and White Warbler, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (December 1910), pp. 61-66
  • The Chickadee: An Enemy of the Polyphemous Moth, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (December 1910) p. 77
  • Notes on the Nest of the Black-Capped Chickadee, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (December 1910) p. 77
  • An Ovenbird Incubating Two Eggs. Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (March 1911)
  • Notes on the Winter Birds of 1906-07, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (March 1911) pp. 12-18
  • Time of Incubation of the Ovenbird, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (March 1911) pp. 18-20
  • Notes on Feeding Winter Birds, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (March 1911) p. 23
  • A Study of Two Chickadee Families, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (June 1911) pp. 21-23
  • Notes on the Canada Warbler, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (September 1911) pp. 46-49
  • The Natal Down of Chipping Sparrows, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (September 1911) p. 58
  • Why Woodpeckers and Chickadees Are Prone to Use Cedar and Poplar Trunks as Nesting Sites, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (September 1911) p. 59
  • A Robber Baron, Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society (December 1911) p. 62
  • The Olive-Backed Thrush (Hylocichla ustulate swainsoni) at His Summer Home, Wilson Bulletin (September 1913) pp. 118-137
  • A Hermit Thrush Study, Wilson Bulletin (December 1914) pp. 180-186
  • A Brief Study of the Nest Life of the Black-Throated Green Warbler, Wilson Bulletin (December 1914) p. 186
  • The Annals of Three Tame Hermit Thrushes, Wilson Bulletin (June 1916) pp. 64-69
  • A Snug Home, Nature Magazine (July 1930)
  • An Unusual Redstart Nest, Nature Magazine (May 1939) p. 277
  • What of the Nest? Nature Magazine (December 1939) pp. 582-583

Other scientific contributions

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While the main objective of her field activity was bird study, Stanwood included detailed observations of all the nature surrounding her home. She shared her observations in contributions to scientific journals and through correspondence with other scientists. In 1913, she sent specimens of local crane flies to Charles Paul Alexander for his entomology studies. He noted that the specimens were collected "while she was engaged in the study of insects that were being fed to nestling birds."[16] A species of crane fly, Limnophila stanwoodae, was named for her.

The paratypes were collected by Miss Cordelia J. Stanwood, the well-known student of bird-life, in whose honor the species is named,. Miss Stanwood has done much to discover the craneflies in the vicinity of her home city, and as a result of her careful observations our knowledge of the Hancock Co. Tipulidae is remarkably complete and constitutes one of the most valuable lists of a restricted locality that has ever been secured.[17]

Photography

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Frank Chapman, editor of Bird-Lore [18]

Stanwood was a pioneer in bird photography,[19] possibly the first female ornithological photographer.[20][21]

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List of articles
  • A Tame Downy Woodpecker, Nature and Culture (April 1913) pp. 7-13
  • The Hermit Thrush at Home, Nature and Culture (May 1913) pp. 24-33
  • A Plea for the Birds, Ellsworth American (July 30, 1913)
  • A Small Work-basket, Home Progress (August 1913)
  • A Nest in the Eaves-trough, Blue-Bird[Note 2] (January 1914) pp. 92-94
  • The Brown Creeper at Home, Blue-Bird (February 1914) pp. 1, 15-123
  • English Sparrows Mobbing Birds, Blue-Bird (April 1914) p. 67
  • Nest of the Redstart, Country Life in America (April 1914) pp. 108-110
  • A Glimpse into the Kindergarten of the Ovenbird, Blue-Bird (May 1914) pp. 216-218
  • An Accident Among the Bird Neighbors, Blue-Bird (May 1914) p. 218
  • The Nashville Warbler, Blue-Bird (June 1914) pp. 239-244
  • A Wild "Pigeon Bed. Blue-Bird (January 1915) pp, 1O6-107
  • The Brown Creeper at Home, Blue-Bird (January 1915) pp. 99-101
  • The Instinctive Freeze, Blue-Bird (January 191 5) p. 109
  • A Brave Little Widower: A Study of Redstarts, Home Progress (July 1915) pp. 1106-1108
  • Two Chickadee Nests, Blue-Bird (March 1915) pp. 163-165
  • A Tale of Two Chipping Sparrows, Blue-Bird (June–July 1915) pp. 246-250
  • A Sketch of the Magnolia Warbler on his Breeding Ground, Blue-Bird (December 1915) pp. 1-13
  • The Red-Breasted Nuthatch, Home Progress (January 1916) pp. 213-214
  • A Skillful Architect, House Beautiful (February 1916) pp. 40-42
  • The Red-Eyed Vireo and His Nest, Home Progress (February 1916) pp. 406-409
  • A Bird Craftsman, Country Life in America (March 1916)
  • A Rare Musician, Blue=Bird (March 1916)
  • The Junco, Country Life in America (March 1916)
  • Robin Redbreast, Home Progress (March 1916) pp. 310-311
  • Bird Architecture, Country Life in America (April 1916) p. 43
  • Nesting Days: The Chipping Sparrow, Country Life in America (April 1916) p. 52
  • Does a Bird Census Really Show the:Increase or Decrease of Birds in a Given Locality? Blue-Bird (May 1916) pp. 13-14
  • The Genii of the Garden, Blue-Bird (May 19 16) pp. 15-17
  • The Chipping Sparrow, Country Life in America (June 1916)
  • An Experience with a Winter Wren, Blue-Bird (September 1916) pp. 22-28
  • A Sketch of the Golden-Crowned Kinglet, Blue-Bird (October 1916) pp. 25-27
  • The Alder Flycatcher, Blue-Bird (November 1916) pp. 8-9
  • The Olive-Backed Thrush, Blue-Bird (November 1916) pp. 14-19
  • A Brief Redstart Study, Blue-Bird (December 1916) pp. 19-22
  • A Guest from Central America, Blue-Bird (February 1917) pp. 65-68
  • The White-throated Sparrow, Songster, Country Life in America (March 1917) p. 71
  • The Black-Capped Chickadee, Blue-Bird (March 1917) pp. 105-110
  • The Black-throated Green and the Magnolia Warblers, Blue-Bird (April 1917) pp. 134-135
  • The Chestnut-Sided Warbler, Blue-Bird (May 1917) pp. 157-161
  • The Red-Eyed Vireo, House Beautiful (June 1917)
  • The Fisherman, Blue-Bird (June 1917) pp. 197-198
  • The Black Snowbird (Junco hyemlis hyemalis), Blue-Bird (September 1917) pp. 237-240
  • Downy Woodpecker-A Friend in Foul as Well as in Fair Weather, Blue-Bird (September 1917) pp. 217-221
  • The Red-Breasted Nuthatch, Blue-Bird (September 1917) pp. 229-232
  • The Blue-Headed Vireo: Good Helpmeets, Blue-Bird (October 1917) pp. 249-252
  • The Summer Home of the Yellow-Bellied Flycatcher, Blue-Bird (December 1917-January 1918) pp. 12-13
  • Hermit Thrush, His Nest and His Young, Blue-Bird (February 1918) pp. 27-29, 31-32
  • A Guest of the Night, House Beautiful (June 1918) p. 39
  • Baby-The Children's Tame Hummingbird, House Beautifu1 (March 1920) pp. 197 ,324-325
  • The Tenants of Birdsacre, House Beautifu1 (October 1920) pp. 280-281
  • The Downy Woodpecker, House Beautiful (January 1921) pp. 24, 66
  • A Close-up Study of Baby Parula Warblers, Lewiston Journal Magazine Section (June 20, 1925)
  • My Acquaintance with the Winter Wren, Lewiston Journal Illustrated Magazine Section (December 19, 1925)
  • The Chestnut-sided Warbler Family at Home in the Meadow-sweet Bush, Lewiston Journal Illustrated Magazine Section (June 6, 1926)
  • Field and Forest Folk-The Hermit Thrush, Lewiston Journal Magazine Section (June 19, 1926)
  • A Member of the Board of Health in His Summer Home, Lewiston Journal Illustrated Magazine (September 19, 1926)
  • The Redstarts Build Their Nest, Christian Science Monitor (August 22, 1927)
  • Flowering Shrubs Are Orchards for the Annual Bird Migrations, Lewiston Journal Magazine Section (April 12, 1952)
  • The Weeks Ahead Time to See the Birds, Lewiston Journal Magazine Section (April 11, 1953)
  • Now Is The Time to Start Noticing Nesting Habits of Various Birds, Lewiston Journal Magazine Section (May 23, 1953)

Other published articles

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List of other published articles
  • Dyeing: How to Get Good Colors, School Arts Book 5 (June 1906), pp. 709-716
  • Home-made Dyes. How to Make and How to Use Them, Suburban Life (November 1909)
  • How to Make a Raffia Work Bag, School Arts Magazine (November 1913)
  • A Suggestion, Ellsworth American (June 14, 1914)
  • Short Method of Reading, Ellsworth American (June 17, 1914)
  • Is It Fair? Ellsworth American (July 22, 1914)
  • Art in the Home: May Be a Part of Economic Training, Ellsworth American (July 29, 1914)
  • Nature Study as a Diversion, Normal Instructor and Primary Plans (June 1915)
  • A New Use for Honey Bees, Blue-Bird (September 1916) pp. 11-13
  • Little House in the Garden, Craftsman (October 1916)
  • The Tree Surgeon, Country Life in America (February 1917)
  • The House Beautiful, House Beautiful (February 1917) pp. 193-195
  • Glimpses of Old Blue Hill, House Beautiful (April 1919) pp. 222-224
  • The Story of Ellsworth, House Beautiful (December 1919) pp. 175, 374-375
  • Castine--A Village by the Sea, House Beautiful (August 1920) pp. 92-94
  • Use Common Sense in Caring for Your Hens, Lewiston Journal Illustrated Magazine Section (April 25, 1925)
  • Job Stanwood, Pre-Revolutionary Patriot and Pioneer of Mt. Desert Islant, Lewiston Journal Magazine Section (May 29, 1926)

Conservation activism

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about 'feather trade' activism. mention article published

Personal life

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Cordelia Stanwood was raised as a Victorian lady. She was never financially secure as an adult. Her income from teaching and writing kept her impoverished but she refused financial help, even from her family and closest friends.[23] During the winter, Stanwood

Stanwood was described as eccentric[Note 3] by some but "romantic, mysterious and inspirational" by others.[25]

Legacy

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USGS migration card, Flicker
May 3, 1943

The web site of the North American Bird Phenology Program, US Geological Survey, recognizes Stanwood as a major contributor. A short biographical sketch is included on the web site.[26] One of her migration observation cards in which she complained of a woodpecker "tapping constantly" and "stealing suet" is featured.[27]

In 1961, three years after Stanwood's death, the Stanwood Wildlife Foundation received a certificate with the following text

THE BUREAU OF
SPORT FISHERIES AND WILDLIFE
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
WASHINGTON, D.C.
gratefully acknowledges the services of
MISS CORDELIA STANWOOD
in reporting, for the use in scientific investigations,
observations on the distribution, migration, and
abundance of North American birds for 32 years
during the period 1910 to 1946.[28]

Birdsacre

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Stanwood Wildlife Sanctuary and Homestead
Birdsacre
 
 
TypeNature reserve
Location289 High Street
Nearest cityEllsworth, Maine
Coordinates44°15′27″N 68°24′19″W / 44.25750°N 68.40528°W / 44.25750; -68.40528
Area200 acres (80.94 ha; 0.31 sq mi)
CreatedAugust 1, 1960
Open10 a.m.-4 p.m. June–September and by appointment
Websitebirdsacre.com

Birdsacre, officially named the Stanwood Wildlife Sanctuary and Homestead, is now a park including Stanwood's historical home and adjacent land. The house is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.

History and development

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After her father's death in 1914, maintenance of Stanwood's home was neglected. Examination of the property in 1958, shortly after her death, showed that the roof of the large barn had collapsed and the condition of the house was badly deteriorated. Because Stanwood received old age assistance from the state, the state held a claim on the estate[29] even though Stanwood donated her house and land as a museum and sanctuary.[30]

After seeing the Stanwood estate listed for sale in Yankee magazine, Chandler Richmond, Stanwood's biographer, met with the Ellsworth Rotary Club on January 6, 1959. Some of the older members knew Cordelia Stanwood all their lives and Richmond hoped to gain support for preserving the property.

Preserving the Stanwood property became a community project. The Stanwood Wildlife Foundation was incorporated and took title to the property in November 1959. Much of the work was done by volunteers, some of whom were craftsmen skilled in hand working wood to preserve the historic nature of the house.[31]

Stanwood Homestead Museum

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Stanwood's house, built by her father in 1850, is now a museum. The furniture consists of period pieces, many of which are original to the home. Also displayed are many of Stanwood's photographs, art and crafts.

In 1973, the Stanwood house and surrounding grounds were added to the National Register of Historic Places in Hancock County, Maine.

Richmond Nature Center

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The Richmond Nature Center was added to the park in 1990, constructed by the Ellsworth Vocational Tech class. It houses displays of mounted birds and mammals, collections of bird nests and eggs, many over 100 years old, art exhibits by local artists and a gift shop.[32]

The sanctuary also includes a wildlife rehabilitation center and housing for raptors too badly injured to be released. The enclosures are located under trees near the museum.[33]

The museum and nature center open daily from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. from June through September. Hours are subject to change depending on the availability of volunteer staff. The organization archives all of Stanwood's original field notes and photographic plates and makes them available to researchers and the public by appointment.[34]

Stanwood Wildlife Sanctuary

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The Stanwood property that Cordelia named Birdsacre was originally forty acres. One hundred sixty additional acres of land adjacent to the original homestead were added to the sanctuary thanks to a gift by Ruth Foster in 1967.[35]

The current park includes three long hiking trails designated as the White, Red and Blue trails. A number of interconnecting paths provide a wide variety of possible routes to walk. The wooden Everglade boardwalk, built and maintained by local master gardeners, and the Pinkham Path, surfaced with crushed stone, are handicapped accessible. The Stevenson Pontoon Bog Walkway provides a route over an area of wetlands.[36]

A significant portion of the park is unimproved. It includes the Whitcomb Old Growth Pine Woods, a stand of old growth pines that escaped logging.

The sanctuary grounds are open during daylight hours throughout the year. Bicycles and motorized vehicles are prohibited from the trails. Pets must be leashed and should not be taken near the bird enclosures.[34]

Notes

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  1. ^ Volumes of the Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society are available on-line through Google Books
  2. ^ Blue-Bird was a monthly magazine published by Dr. Eugene Swope in Cincinnati, Ohio. The contents were scientifically correct but written in a simple style. It was "devoted more especially to the interests of Junior Audubon Society members, yet adults, as well as children, take a keen interest in its pages".[22]
  3. ^ "...a demeaning term that underscores the dearth of historical understanding concerning women's work in the natural world."[24]

Citations

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  1. ^ Labbie 1977, p. 1.
  2. ^ Cevasco & Harmond 2009, p. 482.
  3. ^ Shushkewich 2012, p. 116.
  4. ^ Richardson 2002, p. 38-39.
  5. ^ Richmond 1978, p. 11-12; Richardson 2002, p. 42.
  6. ^ Richardson 2002, p. 44-45.
  7. ^ Shushkewich 2012, p. 117.
  8. ^ Richmond 1978, p. 13.
  9. ^ Richardson 2002, p. 46-47.
  10. ^ Richardson 2002.
  11. ^ Richardson 2002, p. 88.
  12. ^ Richmond 1978, p. 137, 34.
  13. ^ Richardson 2002, p. 129.
  14. ^ Shushkewich 2012, p. 120.
  15. ^ Bonta 1995, p. 116.
  16. ^ Alexander 1962, p. 5.
  17. ^ Alexander 1914, pp. 594–596.
  18. ^ Strom 1986, pp. 92–98.
  19. ^ Richardson 2002, p. Intro.
  20. ^ Merrill, Cynthia. "Who is Cordelia?". Retrieved 2 March 2013.
  21. ^ May-McGrath, Elizabeth (2012-04-03). "Stanwood, Cornelia". Maine: An Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2 March 2013.
  22. ^ "Success to Blue Bird". Bird Lore. 16: 405. 1913.
  23. ^ Shushkewich.
  24. ^ Richardon 2002, p. 11.
  25. ^ "Stanwood Homestead Museum". AllTrips. Retrieved 14 January 2013.
  26. ^ Perlick, Mary. "Cordelia Stanwood" (PDF). Observer Biographies. US Geological Survey North American Bird Phenology Program. Retrieved 13 January 2013.
  27. ^ Gillette, Jane. "Notable Migration Cards". US Geological Survey North American Bird Phenology Program. Retrieved 13 January 2013.
  28. ^ Shushkewich 2012, p. 125.
  29. ^ Richmond 1978, p. 139.
  30. ^ Richardson 2002, p. i.
  31. ^ Richmond 1978, pp. 140–142.
  32. ^ "Richmond Nature Center". Stanwood Wildlife Sanctuary. Retrieved 14 January 2013.
  33. ^ "Permanent Guests in the Birdsacre Family". Stanwood Wildlife Sanctuary. Retrieved 15 January 2013.
  34. ^ a b "Birdsacre: Stanwood Wildlife Sanctuary". Retrieved 8 June 2013.
  35. ^ Richmond 1978, p. 146.
  36. ^ "Sanctuary Nature Trails". Stanwood Wildlife Sanctuary. Retrieved 14 January 2013.

References

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