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Past Train Robbery Weekend
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Well Folks,the infamous Hole-in-the-Head Gang was back to try and rob the Train at the Florida Gulf Coast Railroad Museum in Parrish again! We were there on Saturday and Sunday, April 26th and 27th 2008. Watch this space for our next Robbery attempt!! And thanks for looking!
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PBS Documentary Appearance
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This was a special treat for the Gang! Watch for Gang members in the PBS production, by Eagle Productions, about the first National Wildlife Refuge and the first federal conservation officer, Mr Paul Kroegel. It's titled "The Story of Pelican Island" and is about the "Feather Wars" at the turn of the century. In 1858, elegant bird feathers were literally worth their weight in gold. As a result of the expanding market for bird feathers for the fashion industry in the mid-1800s, plume hunters streamed down Florida's east coast in search of rookeries to supply their trade. On reaching Pelican Island, in the Indian River near Sebastian Inlet, market hunters found a proverbial gold mine of egrets, herons and spoonbills. Brown pelicans, the island's namesake, could also be found in great numbers and were on the edge of extinction as a result of vandals who perceived them to be a threat to fisheries.
Paul Kroegel became the birds' unlikely champion. A German immigrant who settled on the west bank of the Indian River Lagoon with his father in 1881. Kroegel took an interest in protecting the island's birds, sailing out daily with his double-barreled shotgun to stand guard against hunters and vandals.
After a noted ornithologist discovered that Pelican Island was the last rookery for brown pelicans on the east coast of Florida, the American Ornithologists' Union and Florida Audubon Society were galvanized to action. In 1901 these groups led the campaign to pass state legislation protecting non-game birds. The Florida Audubon Society hired four wardens to enforce the new law, but it was a dangerous job. Two of those wardens were murdered in the line of duty.
On March 14, 1903, President Teddy Roosevelt signed an executive order establishing Pelican Island as the first federal bird reservation — a forerunner to the National Wildlife Refuge System. This was the first time lands had ever been set aside specifically on behalf of wildlife in the United States. Thereafter, Paul Kroegel was paid $1 a month by the Florida Audubon Society to serve as the first refuge manager.
Funded in part by the Division of Cultural Affairs and slated to be a documentary special on PBS.
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|Around the OWLHOOTS Campfire|
|Hole-in-the-Head Gang Upcoming Events|
|Legion of the Last Roundup|
|Pallet Tin Periwinkles Purloined Product Perfect Palaces|
|Hole-in-the-Bonnet Posters|
|Re-Elect Posters - Marshals & Deputies|
|Wanted Posters - Robbers & Cowboys|
|2008 Sarasota County Fair, FL|
|Thanksgiving Robbery 2007|
|HITHG Images of the Past|
|Hole-in-the-Head Links|
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