HOME

HISTORIC OLD FORT BENTON

MUSEUM OF THE UPPER MISSOURI

HORNADAY - SMITHSONIAN BISON COLLECTION

MUSEUM OF THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS
  Photo Album

UPPER MISSOURI RIVER BREAKS INTERPRETIVE CENTER

TEACHERS GUIDE

BOOKSTORE

HOMESTEAD VILLAGE

OVERHOLSER HISTORICAL  RESEARCH CENTER

MONTANA AGRICULTURAL CENTER

HISTORICAL FORT
BENTON BLOG

RELATED SITES

FORT BENTON LINKS PAGE


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
















THE
HORNADAY - SMITHSONIAN
BISON EXHIBIT



Located at the Museum of the Northern Great Plains complex, this group of six buffalo (Bison bison) is the most significant collection of an American symbol in the United States.


The animals were collected in 1886 by William T. Hornaday for the National Museum in Washington D.C.  It was feared that bison were about to become extinct and none had been preserved in the national collection.   They were taken from the last of the wild herd found between the Yellowstone and Missouri Rivers, the same area as the last buffalo hunt of the Blackfoot in 1879 before they were forced to the reservation.  Twenty-four animals were taken by Hornaday, but only these six mounts were put on exhibition at the Smithsonian in 1887.

During their seventy years of prominent display, the big bull was the model for several national symbols and government issues.  Coins and paper currency, the Great Seal of the Department of the Interior, postage stamps and the National Park Service badge bear the likeness of the big bull in the Hornaday Collection.
The group was dismantled, returned to Montana, and placed in storage in 1955.  After years of neglect the mounts were completely restored and returned to public display in 1996.  The mounts are exhibited in their original poses and positions just as they appeared in the Smithsonian.
The Hornaday - Smithsonian Bison are located at the Museum of the Northern Great Plains and Montana Agricultural Center Complex, 1205 20th Street.



Photographs and artwork within this website may not be copied or reproduced without written permission of the River & Plains Society. Copyright and reproduction rights apply.