Background note
"And now, as the old year is dying, I will just write one thing more;
-- I am going to devote my whole life to the birds, -- in short I am going to
be what Audubon was, -- an ornithologist." (1(5):60) An idealistic young man
from Orange, N.J., T. Martin Trippe became entranced early in life, and by the
age of seventeen, he had begun to assemble a meticulous record of observations
on the local avifauna and flora and the beginnings of a private cabinet of
natural history.
Raised in comfortable circumstances in Orange, N.J., Trippe began
educating himself in natural history at fourteen, commencing his first
ornithological journal in the following year, 1863. Relishing his time
traipsing through the woods, recording birds he had seen (or killed), he did
not stint on the formal study of nature, building a small library on the
subject as time and finances permitted. Killing, dissecting, and mounting
dozens of birds, he also collected eggs, and apparently made efforts to keep
live birds in a cage, including a broad-winged buzzard (Buteo pennsylvanicus) that he had shot but not quite
killed. The heart of his scientific activities, however, was his carefully
recorded observations on seasonal arrivals and departures, and his notes on
disparate aspects of avian biology and behavior, including songs, nesting
behavior, habitat, feeding behavior, and abundance.
Trippe grew restless in seeking to expand his expertise in natural
history, believing that "the popular works are good for nothing," and were
either insufficiently detailed or inaccurate, while "the scientific ones are
too costly to buy except for rich men" (1(2):20). Yet by the time he entered
college in 1866, his library boasted works by DeKay, Giraud, Wilson, and
Nuttall on ornithology, several books on ichthyology and "three or four" on
botany. On March 20, 1869, he acquired an early edition of Charles Darwin's
Variation of Animals and Plants Under
Domestication, enjoying it thoroughly, though not quite accepting the
argument from natural selection (2:20). "Darwin has almost converted me," he wrote,
The arguments advanced in this work, as well as in the "Origin of
Species," seem to me, far more weighty than those brought against the system;
and to me, at least are all but conclusive. Yet I am not quite yet a thorough
Darwinian, in many points, I entirely disagree from his theories; but in the
main theory, that of development, I am all but convinced. Yet, having always
believed in the opposite idea, I still cling to it, and shall not change my
faith until I see further reason to do so. I must confess, however, that
another such work as the last one, or the "Origin of Species," would bring me
over to his side completely; that is, so far as the main ideas go. In regard to
many minor questions, however, I am entirely opposed to his ideas; and shall
not probably be convinced that his is the right view of the case.
As a book of facts it is unrivaled...
He arranges these facts with precision; they come up one after another, likr
bodies of troops charging upon a battery; and at the end of the battle so deep
is the impression that they have made upon the candid reader, so irresistable
is their collected strength, that he cannot but confess, that the author has
carried his point, and that one of the least of his theories must be true.... I
cannot but think that he has established beyond all manner of reasonable doubt,
that many of what we call species are derived from other so-called species;
i.e. that some species that are universally received by the best naturalists,
are nothing more than other equally established species, in other stages of
development. How far this transmutation may go on, I cannot pretend to say; but
I see no reason why, if the one fact is admitted and admitted it
must be, the theory does not follow as a matter of
course.
The conclusions which Darwin draws on the subjects of Inheritance,
Reversion, Selection, etc., do not entirely meet my assent. I cannot undertake,
just at present, to state what my reasons are, for disagreeing with him; for
that would require some study of the subjects, now a little rusty from
inattention... (2:64-65).
Trippe attended New York University, receiving a degree in civil
engineering on June 28, 1869. Frustrated in his desires to join the Powell
Survey, he instead opted to sign on with a railroad as a means of escaping the
east, as much as to visit the west. Observing how house sparrows had invaded
New York and New Jersey in 1866, and proliferated at the expense of local
birds, Trippe saw civilization encroaching upon nature all across the east,
growing certain that Orange could satisfy neither his love for nature nor his
love for culture. "I am tired and sick of this mongrel place;" he wrote, "half
country, half city; with all the discomforts and annoyances that belong to both
without the pleasures of either. And as the town increases in size, my dislike
increases; for now the houses are beginning to appear everywhere, and now I
have to walk half a mile to get into the woods, ther only place in the town or
rather township, for which I have any affection." (1(5)58, Dec. 31, 1866).
Worst of all, Trippe lamented the gradual elimination of nature from
his surroundings:
I have watched the devastation of the woods year after year, as the
axe made inroads from all sides, upon them, and I have seen new roads and
'improvements' made in all my old 'tramping grounds,' and have borne it all
philosophically. But now, at last, when the ruthless hand of 'improvement' is
stretched forth and takes hold of 'the place,' the place, the place where we
have all lived for fifteen years past, where one was born and where one died,
-- I say when the vandal hand of so-called 'modern improvement' approaches the
old homestead, it makes me angry, uncomfortable, and mad. (2:71).
nically, it was the Trippe household, not the woods, that was soonest
destroyed. In August 1869, a fire consumed the house, including Trippe's
stuffed birds, most of books, and his dog, Watch -- in short, everything he had
accumulated over the previous decade with the exception of a few volumes and
some, but not all of his field notes. Two months later, he landed a position
with the Iowa Central, and left the east behind for Oskaloosa, Iowa.
Trippe's hopes for his western experience were subjected to a quick
dose of reality. Hired, as he believed, only because he was recommended by the
President of the company, Trippe was clearly underemployed, and passed his free
time in studying and reading natural history. But like Orange, Oskaloosa proved
to be a "mongrel" place that could not satisfy his hopes. "I am on the
outskirts of civilization here;" he wrote, "yet I am not quite far enough west
to suit my fancy, either. It is 250 miles to the real wilderness; and in the
real wilderness, I long to be. The Wild Turkey, the Deer, and the Wolf still
linger here, but it is a rare thing to catch a sight of them, and a few years
more will sere them exterminated." (2:196).
Trippe garnered an opportunity to work as a transit man with the
Northern Pacific Railroad in April, 1870, and spent five months working in the
wilds of western Minnesota, delighting in the new climate and the new fauna. In
October, however, he was discharged, and with his eyesight failing, he moved to
Saint Paul, reliant, he wrote, only upon his own resources for the first time
in his life. After several months of unemployment, by using connections he had
made during his work with the Iowa Central, he secured a position with the
Albia, Knoxville, and Des Moines Railroad, and returned to Oscaloosa. Trippe's
whereabouts after December 1871 are unknown.
Scope and content
Martin Trippe's surviving scientific journals are all that remain to
document the activities of an enthusiastic amateur ornithologist from New
Jersey. Kept with an almost religious zeal for six years straddling the date of
Trippe's graduation from New York University in 1869, the journals offer a
glimpse into the mental world of a mid-Victorian amateur scientist and insight
into the transformations in natural historical research and practice.
A clear and agile writer, Trippe was an extraoridarily eager
naturalist and meticulous recorder, and his notes provide excellent
documentation on the avifauna of central New Jersey, south central Iowa, and
southern Minnesota in the years immediately following the Civil War, with
sometimes extensive notes on the species, their dates of arrival and departure,
their habits, habitat preference, and behavior. On occasion, he turns
comparative, setting his observations off against those of more established
naturalists, commenting critically upon Darwin, comparing Agassiz, Allen, and
Audubon, and imagining how the environment has changed over the recent years,
either through human intervention or environmental dynamism.
Trippe's ornithology is leavened with discussions of the mammalian
fauna, the climate (particularly in Iowa and Minnesota), geography, the Indian
and white populations, and other miscellaneous scientific matters. At the end
of the years 1869, 1870, and 1871, he provided a convenient summary table of
meteorological observations for the year, the dates of arrivals and departures
of bird species, and miscellaneous observations.
Trippe was extremely ambitious in his scientific aims, faithful to his
records, and his use of both scientific and popular names marks him both as a
relatively advanced student of birds. He began keeping his scientific journal
in August 1865, writing in unbound fascicles, and later sewing them into
bindings. The first volume, covering the years 1865-66, consists of one 25-page
and four 60-page fascicles, each with separate enumeration; the second volume
contains several fascicles with a single, continuous enumeration.
It is clear from the context of some his comments that other, earlier
volumes might once have existed, but were lost in the fire that destroyed his
family home in 1869. Originally, Trippe notes, his records ran as far back as
1862; the first attempt at a journal beginning in January 1863, but all records
before August 1865 were either lost or destroyed. The volume for 1867-1868
survived the fire, but appears subsequently to have been lost. Those journals
that did survive were soaked by firefighters in the blaze, and the warped and
waterstained boards have subsquently been removed, and the journals rebound by
the APS Conservation Department.
Laid into one of the volumes is a decorative band with the
inscription, "Dear Willie."
Arrangement
Vol 1: 25, 60, 60, 60, 60p. (265p.), August
19, 1865-October 4, 1866
Vol. 2: 415p., January 30, 1869-December
28, 1871
Administrative information
Restrictions
None.
Provenance
The Trippe Journals were acquired by the APS in April 1999
(1999-469ms).
Preferred citation
Cite as: T. Martin Trippe Journals, American Philosophical
Society.
Processing information
Catalogued by rsc, 2001.
Additional information
The Trippe journals were rebound in August 1999. The original boards
were removed and are housed separately under the same call number.
| "List of the fauna of Essex Co., N.J." includingmammals, birds, reptiles, fishes, gastropods, insects" |
2:153 |
| "List of the flora of Essex County, New Jersey" |
2:160 |
| "Meteorological observations," 1869 |
2:i (after p.176) |
| "Arrivals of birds, 1869 |
2:v (after p.176) |
| "Departures of birds, 1869" |
2:viii (after p.176) |
| "Miscellaneous observations," 1869 |
2:ix (after p.176) |
| "Dates of birds arrivals at Orange, N.J." |
2:xix (after p.176) |
| "Dates of birds departures from Orange, N.J." |
2:xxiii (after p.176) |
| Mammals--New Jersey |
1, 2:(passim) |
| Birds--Classification |
2:385 |
| Birds--Migration |
2:26-32 |
| Bogs--Minnesota |
2:314-316 |
| Brothers--Death |
2:41-42, 53 |
| Chippewa Indians |
2:293-298, 330-331 |
| Christmas |
2:289 |
| Darwin, Charles Robert, 1809-1883. Variation of animalsand plants under domestication |
2:20, 24, 63-65 |
| Deluge |
2:271-272 |
| Evolution |
2:20, 24, 63-65 |
| Fathers--Death |
2:146-148 |
| Fertilizer |
2:97 |
| Fires--New Jersey |
2:82-92 |
| Fish showers |
2:384 |
| Iowa--Description and travel |
2:133-145,177-232, 337-353, 363-400 |
| Lakes--Minnesota |
2:317-324 |
| Long Island (N.Y.)--Description and travel |
2:93-110 |
| Mauch Chunk (Pa.)--Description and travel |
2:75-76 |
| Meteorology--Observations |
1, 2 (passim) |
| Miller, Hugh. Lecture on the Noachian Deluge |
2:271-272 |
| Minnesota--Description and travel |
2:232-336 |
| Natural history--Iowa |
2:133-145, 177-232, 337-353, 363-400 |
| Natural history--New Jersey |
1:passim, 2:1-132, 150-152 |
| Natural history--New York (State)--Long Island |
2:93-110 |
| New Jersey--Decription and travel |
1:passim, 2:1-132 |
| Niagara Falls (N.Y. and Ont.)--Description andtravel |
2:177, 185-192 |
| Auroras |
2:292-294, 302 |
| Northern Pacific Railroad |
2:232ff |
| Orange (N.J.)--Description and travel |
1:passim, 2:1-132, 354-362 |
| Ornithology--Iowa |
2:133-145, 177-232, 337-353, 363-400 |
| Ornithology--Minnesota |
2:232-336 |
| Ornithology--New Jersey |
1, 2:1-132 |
| Plagiarism |
2:211-212 |
| Rabbits |
2:287-288 |
| Railroads |
2:330-331 |
| Railroads--Iowa |
2:337-353, 369 |
| Saint Paul (Minn.)--Description and travel |
2:301-304 |
| Saint Paul Academy of Science (St. Paul, Minn.) |
2:334-335 |
| Thunderstorms |
2:311-314 |
| Unemployment |
2:301-302 |