Scrambling with my group to shut Audubon’s March-April 2008 subject, we hit a wall. Within the nightfall of publishing’s golden age, promoting was so robust that we had depleted our complete stock of articles. I reached out to Audubon’s go-to man, Frank Graham Jr., as a result of I knew I might at all times depend on him, and since the difficulty occurred to mark the 40th anniversary of his tenure as a subject editor. I requested him if he had a favourite piece we might cull from our archives.
The story he selected had humble origins. Les Line, Audubon’s earlier editor, and his spouse, Lois, had been spending a number of days in Milbridge, a small lobster city in northern Maine and residential to Frank and his spouse, Ada. They lived in a wonderful home in-built 1812 on a excessive hill above a bay, with 20 acres of woods, wildflowers, and a giant pond. In the future the 4 of them had been having fun with a lobster dinner, however all the time they had been socked in by dense fog. Line tossed out the thought to Frank to put in writing a function on fog.
“What he did was take one thing bizarre—fog—an occasion we expertise however by no means actually take into consideration besides maybe as a nuisance, and switch it into an essay that mixes historical past, science, literature, and a Mainer’s private expertise right into a memorable, eminently readable entire,” Line instructed me whereas we had been laying out the story for the difficulty. “It’s certainly a masterpiece.” (You’ll be able to read it here.)
Frank handed away in late Could quickly after reaching his centennial, a exceptional milestone capstoning a life jam full of them. The variety of locations and other people he touched alongside the best way is solely astounding. In order 2025 attracts to a detailed, it appears a becoming time to mirror again on the lasting legacy of Frank’s life and work.
I can consider few American writers who contributed a lot to {a magazine} for as long as he did. Frank’s first task for Audubon—a two-part collection exploring pesticide regulation within the wake of Rachel Carson’s dying—prompted Line to nominate him to the function of subject editor in 1968, a place he held till 2013. “It was one of many smartest strikes I made in my 25 years as editor,” Line instructed me in 2008. “I really consider he’s been a part of a group that has been contributing one of the best environmental reporting and pure historical past writing you’ll find in any journal in America.”
Frank excelled at each. His pursuits prolonged from tiny flies to large conservation figures corresponding to Archie Carr. And his prolific writing on birds stands out as a few of the most interesting within the journal’s 127-year historical past, exhibiting a deep appreciation for element and eager sensitivity for his or her welfare. “The great life can’t be purchased on the expense of humanity’s ties to the pure processes,” he wrote, distilling Audubon’s mission since its founding. “What’s dangerous for birds is normally terrible for human beings.”
Among the many many extraordinary writers within the journal—together with luminaries corresponding to Edward Abbey, Marjorie Stoneman Douglas, and Wendell Berry—his work stood out to Kenn Kaufman, because it did to me, once we had been younger boys. “I joined Audubon on the age of 9, within the mid Sixties, concerning the time Frank began writing for the journal,” says Kaufman, who later assumed the roles of Audubon subject editor and achieved writer himself. “I quickly discovered to observe for his byline. Whether or not he was celebrating nature or reporting on a grim environmental subject, he wrote with such readability that I learn his articles time and again, attempting to see how he achieved his results. Frank was a significant affect on me once I was growing my very own writing model.”
Throughout his 45 years as subject editor, Frank crisscrossed the nation visiting far-flung locations to report on chicken life and sound a clarion name to guard it. (By the top of his profession, he estimated that he had taken 200 reporting journeys!) Frank as soon as singlehandedly wrote virtually a whole 236-page subject, a 30,000-word magnum opus dedicated to a historical past of and a salute to Audubon’s expansive sanctuary system.
Frank knew it effectively. For one of many first assignments I gave him, I despatched him to doc the plight of the Roseate Spoonbill, precariously residing between the southern Everglades and the Florida Keys after human improvement threatened the species’ rebound from overhunting. Within the mangrove forest, Frank watched two mature spoonbills “as they flew with their deep, sluggish wingbeats, their lengthy necks and curious payments pointed north towards their feeding grounds within the Everglades.”
The spoonbill served as a chief instance of an indicator species, mirroring the well being of its habitat for each people and wildlife, and Frank’s writing balanced the ineffable splendor of Florida’s “flame chicken” towards its dire prospects. “Their magnificence, he wrote, “could also be one of the best argument for fixing the system.” Frank additionally exactly captured the expertise of navigating their world, which concerned trudging by “knee deep marl the consistency of oatmeal.”
Jerry Lorenz, who led Audubon’s analysis in Florida Bay, served as Frank’s information to the ecosystem. “As I mirror on the week or so I spent with Frank whereas he labored on that story I consider a quiet, humble, pleasant, and self-deprecating man whose gentle method hid encyclopedic information and foresight concerning the pure world. However most of all,” he says, “I bear in mind his indefatigable nature.” Lorenz had tried to discourage Frank, at 75 then twice Lorenz’s age, from visiting a spoonbill colony on an exceptionally inhospitable island. “He made me look foolish whereas preserving that light, humorous, and incisive demeanor for the just about two hours we mucked by that swamp on the lookout for and counting spoonbill nests,” Lorenz says. “It didn’t shock me he lived to be 100.”
For one more task, Frank ventured to Nebraska’s Platte River to seize the majesty of one of many chicken world’s grandest spectacles: the convergence of half one million Sandhill Cranes throughout their formidable northward migration. At Audubon’s 1,248-acre Lillian Annette Rowe Hen Sanctuary, he peered with two dozen different watchers by small openings in a protracted chicken blind on the shore of the Platte River.
“The long-necked cranes sailed on broad wings towards a sky whose gathering darkness was slashed within the west by a garish wedge of sundown,” Frank wrote. “Slowing and descending now on wings arced tentlike over their our bodies—dumping the wind from their wings because it had been—the cranes wobbled within the air a couple of times and, in a volley of piercing, rattling calls, dropped right into a moist meadow nearby of the bind. One of many grandest cyclic phenomena on our continent was at full tide.”
Hope sprang everlasting in a lot of Frank’s conservation protection, whether or not within the resilience of birds just like the Sandhill Crane or the fortitude of individuals decided to assist them thrive. His expertise for rendering human nature shined brightly in conservation tales that introduced his central topics to life by their phrases and deeds. A masterful profile author, within the Nineteen Eighties Line dispatched him to color memorable portraits of the largest figures within the motion corresponding to Carr, Mardy Murie, and David Brower that also stand the take a look at of time.
No Audubon author confirmed extra sympathy for the unsung heroes on the backside of the meals chain, both. Three of Frank’s passions had been crops, spiders, and flies. Throughout one among many summer season visits with my household to his dwelling, we walked at low tide to the island a few hundred ft from his shore to munch on fireweed, a coastal plant whose flowers and leaves make a scrumptious salad. Who knew? Frank did.
He additionally recognized the completely different spiders climbing out and in of his kayaks. His upstairs workplace contained jars stuffed with them. Frank was very pleased with his co-authorship of a 2007 scientific paper concerning the many spider species present in his hometown for a journal printed by the U.S. Division of Agriculture, and he mailed me a replica. He partly credited Silent Spring for lighting that spark: “Carson made plain the intense aspect of insect life, the ecology of life within the wild, the interactions among the many myriad invertebrates round us.”
Depart it to Audubon’s very personal entomologist to carry out the miracle of casting misunderstood bugs, bearers of malaria and different maladies, as beautiful, sympathetic, and significant creatures. “Hoverflies are gemlike bugs garbed in velvety reds and blacks and golds, rivaling hummingbirds and butterflies in convey to vivid life the lots of crops in bloom,” he wrote. The spry 82-year-old had joined 42 skilled entomologists and amateurs, together with an Iraq warfare vet, for a “Diptera Blitz” on a summer season Saturday afternoon in Acadia Nationwide Park. They had been conducting a 24-hour “intensive but cheap” survey of Diptera, or two-winged flies. Trudging by marsh, bathroom, and forest, Audubon’s bio-blitzer greater than pulled his personal weight, serving to to determine most of the 260 species within the park.
An English main at Columbia, publicity director for the Brooklyn Dodgers (together with throughout their solely championship season in 1955), and a former profitable sportswriter with no scientific coaching, Frank a was self-taught naturalist—straight out of the 19th century, he joked. Few individuals know, owing to Frank’s humility, that he served within the U.S. Navy for 3 years throughout World Conflict II aboard the escort plane service Marcus Island as a torpedoman’s mate. He noticed motion all through the Pacific, combating within the bloody Battle of Okinawa in April 1945, the place, as he shared with me, he witnessed in abject horror kamikaze planes sinking close by American ships. His damaged glasses early on didn’t forestall him from studying his personal ship’s complete library.
Rising up in suburban New York Metropolis, Frank was at all times fascinated by nature, and he spent as a lot time as he might reveling in it. He dated his love of birds to a backyard bird book gifted to him when he was 5 or 6. He appeared out a window and noticed in a bush a black chicken with purple wing patches matching one of many photos—a Pink-winged Blackbird. “I had recognized a chicken alone and gathered the primary of untold recollections in regards to the ‘otherness’ of residing issues round me,” he subsequently wrote. “I had change into a birdwatcher.”
Frank turned a formidable conservationist as effectively. After Carson died, somebody needed to step as much as the plate to defend her from the scathing assaults, typically private, launched by a rogue’s gallery of chemical corporations, agribusiness flacks, and pest management employees. Frank went to bat for Carson, first in his reporting for Audubon within the Sixties, after which within the e-book Since Silent Spring, which turned an immediate traditional. It appeared on the duvet of The New York Instances Guide Evaluate shortly earlier than the primary Earth Day in 1970 and was translated into a number of languages.
In 1990, A.A. Knopf printed The Audubon Ark, Frank’s seminal historical past of the society. The e-book, which he additionally expanded from {a magazine} function, stays a bible for anybody related to the venerable group. It covers in wealthy element Audubon’s conservation successes, from stopping the plume commerce within the early 1900s to the California Condor’s restoration from an progressive captive breeding program within the later a part of the century. It represents a tremendous feat of reporting and analysis, for which Frank carried out a whole bunch of interviews and combed by important paperwork broadly scattered up and down the East Coast.
Frank was a strolling encyclopedia on Audubon’s residing historical past, too. On lots of his visits to sanctuaries and different Audubon outposts, Frank was accompanied by Ada, and their topics had been invariably delighted by the dynamic duo’s excessive spirits and radiant allure. All through Audubon, all you needed to say was “Frank and Ada” and everybody knew who you had been referring to. They had been married for 73 glad years.
Collectively the group wrote 10 youngsters’s books beneath the Audubon imprint through the late Nineteen Seventies. In the meantime, the brand new Audubon Adventures, a colourful newspaper about birds and chicken conservation, was despatched to lecture rooms throughout the nation. Largely developed and written by Ada, Audubon Adventures reached 1 / 4 million youngsters inside 5 years.
On prime of his excellent work as subject editor, Frank wrote 30 books. Along with The Audubon Ark and Since Silent Spring, no less than two others are nonetheless classics: Man’s Dominion: The Story of Conservation in America and Gulls: A Social Historical past.
To be a conservationist of this centurion’s magnitude for therefore lengthy requires as a lot coronary heart because it does head. “I feel one among [Rachel] Carson’s legacies to the longer term is the popularity that it’s higher to return to conservation by love, quite than worry,” Frank wrote in 2012 in one among his last items. Maybe the best honor to pay him could be to rank him as Carson’s worthy successor in environmental journalism. They each imbued their lives and work with a fearlessness within the face of a tricky struggle and an abiding love of nature.
David Seideman was Audubon’s editor-in-chief from 2000 to 2013.
