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Saxton Pope

Saxton Temple Pope (September 4, 1875 – August 8, 1926) was an American doctor, teacher, author and outdoorsman. He is most famous as the father of modernbow hunting, and for his close relationship withIshi, the last member of theYahi tribe and the last knownAmerican Indian to be raised largely isolated from Western culture.[1]

Dr. Saxton Pope
Picture of Pope taken while grizzly hunting at Yellowstone

Early life

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Born inFort Stockton, Texas as the son of an army surgeon, Pope grew up in military camps and frontier towns, where he learned outdoor skills and became an athlete. This is where he first learned archery, as well as horsemanship, riflery, knifemaking, and other skills. He built and attempted to fly a glider.

He later went to medical school at the University of California, graduating in 1899. He set up a practice inWatsonville, California near San Francisco, married Emma Wightman, a medical school classmate, and had four children. In 1912, he became a surgical instructor at the medical school.[1]

Relationship with Ishi

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The medical school where Pope taught was located near the museum where Ishi worked as a janitor, having been brought there for study by Professor T. T. Waterman of theUniversity of California Department of Anthropology. Because Ishi had grown up in the isolated Yahi tribe, he had little immunity to diseases, and Pope met Ishi during his stays at the University hospital. Pope learned some of the Yahi language, and spent much time with Ishi, learning of his life and listening to the Yahi tribal folklore. Ishi taught Pope how to make bows and arrows as the Yahi did, and how to hunt with them. Pope and Ishi remained close until Ishi's death fromtuberculosis in 1916.[2] In spite of this close relationship and against Ishi's frequently stated wishes, Pope insisted that Ishi be autopsied after death and his brain removed.[3]

Later life

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Pope became an avid bowhunter during his time with Ishi, and he continued that after Ishi's death. In 1920, with special permission, Pope and a companion, Arthur Young, went huntinggrizzly bears inYellowstone National Park with hand made bows and steel tipped arrows, taking several. The stuffed and mounted bears are on display at the California Academy of Sciences.[1] Pope later wrote a book,Hunting with the Bow and Arrow, which remains in print. He continued bowhunting until his death in 1926 frompneumonia.[1]

Legacy

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Saxton Pope and Arthur Young have been honored as the namesakes of the Pope and Young Club, an organization dedicated to bowhunting which continues today and includes its own world record book for North American game, taken in Fair Chase, with bow and arrow. He also reintroduced traditional bow and arrow making skills learned from Ishi to other Native Americans whose communities had lost the art.

References

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  1. ^abcd"Saxton Temple Pope". Archived fromthe original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved2007-09-07.
  2. ^Pope, Saxton.Hunting with the Bow & Arrow.
  3. ^Starn, Orin (2004).Ishi's Brain. W. W. Norton & Company.ISBN 978-0-393-05133-9.

External links

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www.pope-young.org

saxtonpope.com [by his biographer]


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