When retired park warden Frank Farley of Camrose, Alta. died in 1949, neighbours installed a stained glass window at his local United Church depicting St. Francis of Assisi, patron saint of the creature kingdom. “He loved this church,” said the pastor. And the townspeople loved him.
Farley, now long forgotten, was among that generation of sodbusters who settled the Prairies and are caricatured today as white supremacists, colonialists and profiteers. Frank Farley And The Birds Of Alberta is closer to the truth, an affectionate biography of a homesteader who achieved national renown in his day as a self-taught ornithologist who loved the land and its people.
Born in St. Thomas, Ontario, Farley left his job as a bank clerk to settle in Alberta in 1892. Provincehood was 13 years away, and the plains were wide open country where buffalo herds could still be found. Not until 1909 would Parliament vote a budget appropriation to save a herd of 750 bison in a Prairie sanctuary.
“Farley was fascinated with birds from a young age,” biographers note. “He published his first article in an ornithological journal when he was 16.”
The young settler’s frontier experience coincided with the dawn of the first great North American conservation movement prompted in part by calamities like the death of the last Passenger Pigeon in 1914. The species “had once been the most abundant on the continent with a population between 3,000,000 and 5,000,000,” so plentiful the birds blacked out the sun in migration. They were hunted to extinction.
“From the early 1900s bird populations were in decline in both Canada and the United States,” authors write. “The reduced numbers of ducks and geese attracted significant attention, given their importance to both sport and subsistence hunters. Habitat change was the primary cause of their decline, particularly with settlers draining wetlands.”
“Some of the large birds will become nearly extinct if we are not careful,” Farley wrote a friend in 1919. He devoted the rest of his life to the study and care of migratory birds.
As warden of Miquelon Lake Provincial Park, Farley marveled that one year “there were 10,000 ducks of all kinds resting along the shores of the south lake and it was commented upon by hundreds of visitors that it was a wonderful sight.” As president of the Alberta Fish and Game Association he led a campaign to introduce conservation themes in public school curricula.
To his death Farley was compiling an encyclopedic listing of all Prairie species he’d seen in 57 years and “all other accounts of Alberta birds I could find.” It was unfinished at his passing.
The epilogue to this love story? Ornithologists named a subspecies of the Boreal Chickadee in Farley’s honour.
“His Camrose house still stands on 49th Street, the Camrose and District Museum that he founded remains open and the City of Camrose now employs a Wildlife and Greenspace Stewardship coordinator whose duties include assisting residents who want to care for Purple Martin nesting boxes,” note authors.
By Holly Doan
Frank Farley And The Birds Of Alberta, by Glen Hvenegaard, Jeremy Mouat and Heather Marshall; University of Alberta Press; 289 pages; ISBN 9781-7721-28239; $32.99




