Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago Audubon Society calls for a name change, moving away from ties to naturalist

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In a letter sent out this week by the Chicago Audubon Society, the environmen­tal consulting organizati­on says it plans to drop “Audubon” from its name and is encouragin­g the National Audubon Society to do the same.

The Chicago Audubon Society said it would determine a new name within the year if the National Audubon Society does not announce a new name.

“Carrying John James Audubon’s name does not serve us well ethically,” the organizati­on said, calling out the naturalist’s ties to a genocidal campaign waged against people of color.

The organizati­on argued that

Audubon had no role to play in the discovery of the nation’s natural resources but merely described them for mostly white audiences.

According to Judy Pollock, president of the Chicago Audubon Society, Audubon was a proud slaveowner and seller who participat­ed in “scientific racism.”

“Audubon is not an appropriat­e standard-bearer for our organizati­on,” she said. “It is time for us to re-examine these naturalist­s’ place in history.”

David Yarnold, former president and chief executive of the National Audubon Society, said the national organizati­on was committed to projecting an image as an antiracist institutio­n, and that it bears the responsibi­lity to help correct centuries of racial injustice, beginning with dropping the name.

Audubon did not found any of the organizati­ons that bear his name; they were named after him posthumous­ly beginning in the 1880s and 1890s because of his deep associatio­n with North American birds, he added.

“We won’t fix 400 years of oppression overnight, but we can do far more as organizati­ons and as individual­s than we thought possible,” Yarnold wrote. “In order to do that, we have to own up to our pasts even while we chart a new future.”

 ?? JOHN J. AUDUBON, AP ?? Ivory-billed woodpecker­s from an engraving by John J. Audubon. The Chicago Audubon Society cites the naturalist’s ties to a genocidal campaign against people of color in deciding to drop his name. It is encouragin­g the National Audubon Society to do the same.
JOHN J. AUDUBON, AP Ivory-billed woodpecker­s from an engraving by John J. Audubon. The Chicago Audubon Society cites the naturalist’s ties to a genocidal campaign against people of color in deciding to drop his name. It is encouragin­g the National Audubon Society to do the same.

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