[Bristol-Birds] Historical Snippet - Aug 12, 1995

  • From: "Wallace Coffey" <jwcoffey@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "Bristol-birds" <bristol-birds@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 1 Feb 2008 09:53:57 -0500

 BBC Snippet  

















Aug 12, 1995 The Bristol Bird Club held an invitational field trip to 
South Holston Lake.  Dr. Stephen M. Russell, for whom our club was named
in the summer of 1990, came home to his old bird club for the first time in 
nearly 45 years. Few members had met him. Twenty-five birders were on 
hand to go birding with Dr. Russell and his wife Ruth. 

She served on the national board of directors of the National Audubon Society 
and was president of the 4,000 member 
Tucson Audubon Society. 

Dr. Russell was curator of birds at the 
University of Arizona museum and 
secretary of the American Ornithologists' 
Union. 

Together Steve and Ruth had banded 
15,000 birds in five years of research 
in Arizona. 

In 1964, his graduate research 
became the first  A.O.U. Monograph: 
A Distributional Study of the Birds of 
British Honduras (now Belize).
This was his doctoral dissertation in
ornithology under Dr. George H. Lowrey,
Jr. at Louisiana State University.  A.O.U.
has since published 61 additional
monographs.  Russell also teamed
with William H. Baltosser in 2000 to
write the Black-chinned Hummingbird
for the species monographs in the 
Birds of North America series.  In
1996 he wrote the account for the Anna's Hummingbird.

In 1965 he was chosen an elective member of A.O.U.  He was also named
an honorary member of the Cooper's Ornithological Society.

In 2001 Steve and Ruth wrote The North American Banders' Manual for 
Banding Hummingbirds.  Point Reyes Station: North American Banding 
Council.  He teamed with William Davis to write Finding Birds in 
Southeast Arizona.   With Gale Monson, he was the lead author of
The Birds of Sonora, a book from his decades of study conducted in the 
dessert of Mexico just south of Arizona.

The BBC established the "Stephen M. Russell Graduate Lectureship"
for Ph.D. students in ornithological studies. 

In 1953, Russell discovered the fall migration of hawks along Clinch 
Mountain near Hayter's Gap in Southwest Virginia. He was a founder 
and charter member of BBC as a high school student at Abingdon, Va.  
His mother drove him to Bristol for club meetings and waited to take him 
home. This was before I-81 was built. He birded for a decade 
in Southwest Virginia until entering Virginia Tech where he earned a B.S.
in biology in 1953.

As far as we know, he is the first birder to have looked for birds at South 
Holston Lake and also the first to have made field notes.  He published his
finding in The Migrant, Vol. 22, No. 1, 1951, p 19.  Fred M. Jones birded
and kept records and published bird notes from the area two decades 
before the reservoir was created but was not living in the region when the
lake was built and filled.

Construction of South Holston Dam had been completed and the gates closed
to fill the reservoir on Nov 20, 1950.  

Feb 11, 1951, Russell first birded South Holston Lake to check for waterbirds. 
He wrote to Dr. Henry M. Stevenson, the famous ornithologist at Florida State 
University, that he found the water backed up about 3/4 miles upstream from 
the state line.  He wrote of waterfowl being seen on one side of the line or 
the 
other which puts him in the vicinity of the mouth of Spring Creek near what is
now Musick's Campground.  He donated a carbon copy of his correspondence
with Stevenson to the BBC archives.  His waterfowl list until early March 1951 
was impressive.  It including Mallards, Black Ducks, Canvasbacks, Lesser Scaup, 
American Golden-eye, Common Merganser, Red-breasted Merganser, Hooded 
Merganser, Old Squaw (Long-tailed Duck), Baldpates (American Wigeon), 
Bufflehead, Pintail, Wood Duck, Ring-billed Gull and Herring Gull. 

The Russells have several times returned to the area and stayed with and
visited with old friends in Abingdon.  He attended the Virginia Society of
Ornithology state meeting at Breaks Interstate Park in early May 2006.

From the archives of the Bristol Bird Club

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