Buffalo: Sacred and Sacrificed
Grant MacEwan
History / Canada
208 pages 6 1/2 x 10"
18 B&W photographs and illustrations
ISBN 0–9699355–0–1 paper CDN 18.95 USA 14.95
Europeans, on their arrival in the West, saw the buffalo as dull, sulky, and of no benefit except to the Indians.
Early governments believed the huge, free–ranging herds were an impediment to enforcement of newly signed
treaties. Enterprising pioneers recognized buffalo hunts as first–class sporting events, sure to appeal to
wealthy and upper-class Britishers and others overseas.
It was only when a remnant of this part of
North America's natural history remained that the significance of the destruction became clear. In Buffalo:
Sacred and Sacrificed, popular historian Grant MacEwan captures the efforts of early conservationists James
McKay, Charles Alloway, Sam Bedson, Frank Oliver, and Michel Pablo to preserve and protect this monarch
of the plains. It is a remarkable account of where the buffalo once roamed—and of their amazing step back
from the brink of extinction. |