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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Delia J. Akeley
Delia Akeley in 1915
Born
Delia Julia Denning

(1869-12-05)December 5, 1869
DiedMay 22, 1970(1970-05-22) (aged 100)
NationalityAmerican
Other namesMickie Akeley
Occupation(s)Explorer; hunter
Spouses
Arthur Reiss
(m. 1889; div. 1902)
(m. 1902; div. 1923)
Warren D. Howe
(m. 1939; died 1951)

Delia Julia "Mickie" Akeley (née Denning, formerly Reiss, later Howe; December 5, 1869 – May 22, 1970) was an American explorer. She was born in Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, a daughter of Irish immigrants, Patrick and Margaret (née Hanberry) Denning.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Carl Akeley's Fighting African Elephants
  • Carl Akeley's Four Seasons

Transcription

Welcome to Carl Akeley: Part Two, where we're going to be talking about the Fighting Elephants. If you want to learn more about the Four Seasons, click there! In 1905 Marshall Field, the Field Museum's namesake and first major benefactor, funded a trip for Carl and his new wife, Delia, to go to Africa. After seeing Carl's work with P.T. Barnum's elephant, Jumbo, a few years earlier, Field was inspired to have his own pair of humongously over-sized mammals. Even at the beginning of the 20th century the African Elephant was considered to be a threatened species so people going on these expeditions were only permitted 2 elephants per person. That's still a lot of elephants per person. And to be quite honest, Carl kind of blew it. The two elephants he ended up taking down were done so in self-defense. So it was up to his wife, Delia, to take down the big bull elephant, which she did. In order to prepare the hides for mounting, they worked with a team in the fields of Africa to salt the hides. Carl also invented a new way of using a kind of vegetable tan that would help preserve the hide, but still make it pliable without allowing it to rot. Once they got back to the States, gigantic frames were made using a combination of metal rods and the animal's own bones, and then musculature was put on top of the frame. These armatures were informed by detailed measurements taken from the animals shortly after death. The hides were too massive to be worked whole so they were put on in numbered sections, and then each one of those sections was meticulously sculpted to capture all of the little wrinkles and nuances of the skin. After that, they used dyed threads to carefully hide all of the seams. The elephants went on display in 1909 and became known as "The Fighting African Elephants." Carl's is the smaller one, and Delia of course has the bigger one. Today, Carl's elephant can be seen cracking along the edges, presumably because he tried to make it appear larger in death than it was in life. We know from Carl and Delia's work together on the Four Seasons that their marriage saw a lot of love. But rumor has it that Carl posed these elephants this way to reflect that maybe things weren't going so hot. On a separate voyage to Africa, Delia's affections were stolen by another! It was a monkey. She initially trapped the monkey in order to make observations of it in the field, for science. She eventually let it roam free- at least, sort of; it was tied to a leash, but it moved with them between camps. It had it's own umbrella bearer, she made it a pair of little pants, it had its own toilet, and she named it J.T. Jr. I'm not making this up. Eventually, Carl got a job at the American Museum of Natural History, so they moved to New York, and Delia insisted on bringing the monkey with them from Africa. But, surprise, surprise: monkeys don't do well in apartments in the biggest city of America. Delia became obsessed with taking care of J.T. Jr. She stopped leaving her apartment, and stopped inviting guests over for dinner because their apartment smelled like monkey poo all the time. Carl started working long nights at the studio and would be gone for days at a time. This proved to be a problem, because eventually J.T. Jr. bit Delia on the leg, and the bite become so infected, by the time Carl came home a few days later, they almost had to amputate her leg. Naturally, this was kind of the last straw, and Carl insisted that J. T. Jr. finally be placed in a zoo. Delia was distraught, and without warning, she fled one night to join the war effort over in Europe, eventually filing for divorce overseas. A lot of that discourse can be seen reflected in his mounts here. Carl was a broken man for a long time, but eventually he remarried. Today, his influence can be seen all over the world, and the Carl Akeley Award is given out every year at the World Taxidermy Championships in order to honor innovation in the field. If you want to see more of Carl Akeley's work, you can visit some of his dioramas at the American Museum of Natural History, and of course, you can always visit his legacy here, at The Field Museum.

Early life

Delia Julia Akeley was born in 1869,[1] although over the years, whether due to Delia's own misrepresentation or that of others, her birth year has been given as 1875. She ran away from home in her late teens and made her way to Milwaukee, where she married Arthur Reiss, a barber, in 1889.[2] She was just shy of her 20th birthday, but because of the erroneous attribution of her birth date, virtually every published account states that she was 14 when she married Reiss.[citation needed]

With Carl E. Akeley

In Milwaukee she met taxidermist, artist and inventor Carl E. Akeley, who was employed at the Milwaukee Public Museum. Akeley biographers Penelope Bodry-Sanders and Jay Kirk suggest that Delia and Akeley had an affair;[3][4] in any case, Delia and Reiss soon divorced, and in 1902 Delia married Akeley,[5] who by then had become Taxidermist-in-Chief at the Field Columbian Museum in Chicago, later the Field Museum of Natural History.

Delia Akeley with her kill (1906)

During his years at the Field, she assisted her husband in the creation of his groundbreaking Four Seasons of the Virginia Deer dioramas, and joined him on a 1906-07 collecting expedition to Africa. Akeley later joined the American Museum of Natural History in New York where he continued his taxidermy work and conceived the great Africa Hall. Delia accompanied Akeley on expeditions to collect specimens central to the most important displays in the African sections of both museums. The larger of the mounted African elephants known as the "Fighting Bulls" in the Field Museum's main hall was killed by Delia on the 1906 Field Museum expedition,[6] and she also collected one of the members of the elephant group in the African Hall at the American Museum of Natural History on a 1909-11 expedition for that museum.[7]

In Kenya, when hunting the elephants that were to form the most important of all the displays in the African Hall of the American Museum of Natural History, Carl Akeley was attacked by a bull elephant while out hunting with a team of his porters and helpers. They panicked and ran thinking he was done for. But Akeley survived, in no small part because Delia traveled back to his body with two porters who had initially fled in terror.[8] He was seriously injured, but Delia got him to a hospital after a dangerous portage in mountainous country. She also nursed him back from the brink of death on at least one other occasion when he would have succumbed to blackwater fever2

In 1920, after Carl's recovery from blackwater fever, the Akeleys returned to New York accompanied by a pet monkey called "J.T. Jr.", acquired by the Akeleys during their last expeditions in Kenya. Back in New York, Carl Akeley spent his time raising money for the museum, sculpting models for his dioramas, and becoming better acquainted with Mary Jobe, a former debutante and Bryn Mawr graduate who had become an African explorer and ethnographer. Delia became increasingly occupied with the care and study of J.T. who was an extremely bright and jealous primate.[9]

Both Bodry-Sanders and Kirk suggest that Delia's obsession with the monkey, and increasing isolation from the outside world, contributed to the deterioration of the Akeley marriage, and an acrimonious divorce occurred in 1923.[5]

Carl married his second wife, Mary, when he was 60 and she was 46, in 1924. Carl Akeley returned to Africa to hunt and study the mountain gorillas with his new wife Mary. In 1926, Carl contracted what has been described as dysentery but involved aggressive progression and aggressive bleeding from his orifices.[citation needed]

Later life

In 1924, after her divorce, Delia continued to travel widely in Africa leading her own expeditions and concentrating more on the ethnography of the more reclusive tribes such as the Forest People pygmies.[10] She was one of the first westerners to explore the desert between Kenya and Ethiopia, and she explored the Tana River in a dugout canoe, entering it from the Indian Ocean. She also lived for several months with the pygmies of the Ituri Forest, Zaire.[11]

On January 4, 1939, she married Warren D. Howe,[12] a businessman, who died in 1951.[5] She was listed in the 1946 edition of Who's Who in America.[13]

Death

Delia Akeley died in 1970. Although her obituary lists her age at the time of death as 95,[5] she was in fact 100 years old.[citation needed]

Bibliography

Her autobiographical works include:

  • Jungle Portraits
  • All True!

She was one of the first authors to write a non-anthropomorphic but psychologically insightful biography of another primate:

  • J.T. Junior: The Biography of an African Monkey (Macmillan: 1928) OCLC 547783

Together with Christina Dodwell, Mary Kingsley, Florence Baker, and Alexine Tinne, she was one of the five subjects of a book by Margo McLoone:

  • Women explorers in Africa (1997).[14]

Delia Akeley is included as a subject in a book on women explorers:

  • Verwegene Frauen Weiblicher Entdeckergeist und die Erforschung der Welt, written by Lorie Karnath.[15]

References

  1. ^ "U.S. Census, 1880". U.S. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). Retrieved May 8, 2016.
  2. ^ "Wisconsin Marriages, 1836-1930". Family Search database. Retrieved May 8, 2016.
  3. ^ Bodry-Sanders, Penelope (1998). African Obsession: The Life and Legacy of Carl Akeley. Batax.
  4. ^ Kirk, Jay (2010). Kingdom Under Glass. Holt.
  5. ^ a b c d "Mrs. Delia Akeley Howe Dead; Explorer and Hunter in Africa". The New York Times. May 23, 1970. p. 22.
  6. ^ Akeley, Carl (November 1915). "Elephant Hunting on Mt. Kenya: A Woman Wins Record pair of Elephant Tusks for a Sportsman's License in British East Africa". American Museum Journal. 15 (7): 323–28.
  7. ^ Our Amazing Planet Staff. "8 Unsung Women Explorers". LiveScience.com. Retrieved April 30, 2012.
  8. ^ Delia Akeley, "Jungle Rescue", Jungle Portraits, pg. 249 (The MacMillan Company, 1930).
  9. ^ Carl Akeley's Fighting African Elephants, archived from the original on 2021-12-22, retrieved 2020-05-13
  10. ^ Jungle Portraits, pp. 159-229
  11. ^ "DELIA AKELEY BACK WITH PIGMY LORE". The New York Times. June 27, 1930. p. 17.
  12. ^ "Dr. Warren D. Howe weds Mrs. Delia Akeley, Explorer". Chicago Sunday Tribune. January 29, 1939. Retrieved February 18, 2015.
  13. ^ "Delia Akeley Howe, Explorer, Dies". Daytona Beach Sunday News-Journal. May 24, 1970. Retrieved February 18, 2015.
  14. ^ Margo McLoone, Women explorers in Africa: Christina Dodwell, Delia Akeley, Mary Kingsley, Florence von Sass-Baker, and Alexandrine Tinne, Capstone Press, 1997.
  15. ^ Verwegene Frauen Weiblicher Entdeckergeist und die Erforschung der Welt (Terra Magica: 2009) ISBN 3724310234/ISBN 978-3724310235)

Further reading

  • Duncan, Joyce (2010). Ahead of their time : a biographical dictionary of risk-taking women. Portsmouth: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0313316609.

Sources

  • Delia J. Akeley, J.T. Junior: The Biography of an African Monkey (Macmillan Company, 1928) OCLC 547783
  • D. Akeley, Jungle Portraits (The Macmillan Company, 1930)
  • Penelope Body-Sanders, African Obsession: The Life and Legacy of Carl Akeley (Batax, 1998); ISBN 0962975990/ISBN 978-0962975998
  • Lorie Karnath, Verwegene Frauen Weiblicher Entdeckergeist und die Erforschung der Welt (Terra Magica, 2009) ISBN 3724310234 ISBN 978-3724310235)
  • Jay Kirk, Kingdom Under Glass: A Tale of Obsession, Adventure, and One Man's Quest to Preserve the World's Great Animals (Henry Holt and Co., 2010); ASIN: B0057DAQ54
  • Elizabeth Fagg Olds, Women of the Four Winds: The Adventures of Four of America's First Women Explorers (Mariner Books, 1999); ISBN 0395957842/ISBN 978-0395957844
  • Douglas J. Preston, Dinosaurs in the Attic (St. Martin's Griffin; Reissue edition (November 15, 1993)), ISBN 0312104561/ISBN 978-0312104566
This page was last edited on 8 May 2023, at 12:06
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