[108522]Luther Chase Goldman
(1909-2005) was an American
naturalist and wildlife photographer. Best known for his
photographs of
endangered species
of
birds, he was chief photographer of the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service.
Luther was
born in Washington,
D.C.
, on November 2, 1909. He was fortunate in
his younger years to learn nature lore from his father,
Edward A. Goldman, an eminent naturalist. In teenage
summer months he served as camp boy on research expeditions in
Arizona, trapping and preparing specimens of mammals, his early
interest, and also gaining field experience with the Predator and
Rodent Control Branch of the
Bureau of Biological Survey of
the United States Fish and Wildlife Service.
At the
University of Maryland
he earned a degree in biological sciences and
lettered as a football first-string lineman. Three years of
field work followed: in Mexico (two winters) for biological
investigations of wintering waterfowl, as a member of a party in
Baja California to collect mountain sheep (a new subspecies), in
Florida, as assistant in
Dr. Arthur
H. Howell’s fauna research,
and in Arizona for mammal research on the north rim of the Grand
Canyon.
In 1939, he married his college sweetheart,
Mary Elizabeth Mulligan.
That year, too, was the beginning of his 20-year career as manager
of national wildlife refuges at the new
Salton Sea National Wildlife
Refuge in California.
Luther’s intense interest in ornithology and in wildlife
photography developed early as a result of living in remote areas
with poor access to good film developing and printing sources. He
took up his own darkroom work and began documenting required
narrative reports to the Washington D.C office with 8” x 10”
prints. His illustrations attracted immediate attention, and copies
of his photographs began to appear on the covers of Bureau reports
and elsewhere.
In 1941, he attended the first In Training School on Bureau
procedures and activities at
Patuxent Research Refuge in Laurel,
Maryland.
He spent months on a one-man biological
reconnaissance prior to establishment of the Imperial
and Havasu National Wildlife
Refuges on the lower Colorado River
in Arizona.
Development plans for the
Salton Sea National Wildlife
Refuge were put on hold due to unstable conditions of the Sea’s
water table.
In 1942, Luther transferred to New Mexico to
manage the Bitter Lake National Wildlife
Refuge
. Along with normal refuge activities was an
engineering project to change the course of the Pecos River for
control of bank erosion. At night, only the bright lights of the
far off German prisoner-of-war camp could be seen. Entering active
duty in the U.S. Army in 1943, Luther served for three years as
entomologist.
Upon his return to civilian life he was offered three choices in
wildlife refuge management.
He seized the opportunity to research and
develop the two new national wildlife refuges on the Texas-Mexico
border in the Rio Grande Valley—the 45,000-acre Laguna
Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge
and the 2000-acre Santa Ana
National Wildlife Refuge
. The next 12 years (1947-59) were filled
with excitement and challenges. In Wild America, co-authored with
Roger Tory Peterson after their
30,000-mile birding expedition around North America, James Fisher
wrote of him, “Luther is one of the best field men I have ever
encountered.”
After the aforementioned 20 years on western refuges (including
Army service), Luther accepted a position in the Washington Office
as assistant chief, Section of Wildlife Management in the Branch of
Wildlife Refuges. He, Betty, and their son, Edward, moved to
College Park, Maryland. He served on many panels and teams,
including Secretary Udall’s Eagle Survey Team, which resulted in
new restrictions on poisoning, trapping, and aerial hunting of
eagles in the U.S.
Later, his abilities in wildlife photography led to his appointment
as the Bureau’s chief photographer and curator of the extensive
photo files, for which he photographed endangered species and field
activities. He received a certificate of commendation for his
photography in the publication of Interior’s Birds in Our
Lives.
Through these years, his many other biological and photographic
duties included consultation on scientific matters and representing
the Division of Wildlife Refuges at the Mountain Sheep Conference
in Hermocillo, Mexico.
In cooperation with the National Aeronautical
Space Administration and the Atomic Energy
Commission, Luther photographed wildlife on Amchitka Island
, Alaska, to determine the effect of subterranean
atomic bomb blasts on surface fauna and wildlife on the Kenai
Peninsula
. With
Dr. Donald Aldrich and artist Bob Hines, he selected and arranged
the annual showing of Duck Stamp art entries for judges’ selection
of the contest winner. On the U.S.-Canadian team to secure whooping
crane eggs from the Northwest Territories, Canada, Luther
photographed the operation from the air and on the ground and wrote
an account for the Bureau publication In-Sight (40,000 copies
reprinted for wide distribution). He made a second trip for team
egg-pickup in 1974. With Dr. Aldrich, he made a six-year study and
photographic record of the bald eagle from nestling to adult to
determine its age when acquiring complete white head and tail
feathers. Prior to the California condors’ disappearance in the
wild, in cooperation with the National Wildlife Federation, Luther
photographed them in the mountains of Sespe National Sanctuary,
northeast of Los Angeles. He created slide shows concerning
endangered species for use by the Regional and Washington Offices,
as well as on loan to the general public.
His photographs have hung in the U.S. Capitol, State Department,
museums in Canada, the United Kingdom, and the library of Peter
Scott at Slimbridge, and are widely used in publications of the
federal government and National Geographic Society and in books by
conservation authors.
Retiring in 1974 after 35 years of government service, he led many
natural history tours, both in the National Capitol area as well as
abroad, including such places as Trinidad & Tobago. He was
honored by both the Montgomery County Chapter of the
Maryland Ornithological
Society and the
Prince George’s
County Audubon Society, highlighting the contributions he made
to them and to the cause of wildlife preservation in general.
He was elected to membership in the
Washington Biologists’
Field Club in 1960 and was chairman of Books and Photographs
Committee. When The Members and History of the Washington
Biologists’ Field Club was revised in 1984 and the Supplement in
1993, Luther supplied the photographs, printing many from old
negatives (some glass plates) and developing and printing new ones.
In 1996, he was selected to become an honorary member.
Luther lived with his wife, Betty. for many years in their home in
College Park, Maryland, until her death in 2002. He continued to
live alone and be very active with birding projects. Luther died at
age 95 in Lanham, Maryland, on January 12, 2005, after a short
illness. Luther was one of the most popular and active members of
the Washington Biologists’ Field Club and attended an oyster roast
on Plummers Island on October 30, 2004, just three days before his
95th birthday.