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Skip to content Birding New Jersey The Experience of Birding Posted on July 26, 2015November 28, 2020 by Rick Wright HOW CAN A WOODPECKER BE RACIST? Well, it can’t. It’s a bird. But I’m continually amazed by what the human mind can do with — can do to — the things around us. It’s been a summer of symbols in the United States, and while the removal of even the most vile of signifiers can’t destroy their signifieds, at least we’ve finally agreed that governments have no business propping up evil by displaying its tokens. Haven’t we? Now comes this, just the latest bit of officially sanctioned racist intimidation to hit the e-waves. It’s ludicrous that there’s debate at all about the three white-sheeted thugs riding mock-heroic beneath a moonlit sky. Scrape ’em off, paint ’em over. But what about that other wistful reminder of a golden past, the big black and white bird with the red crest in the foreground? It turns out, google informs us, that woodpeckers lead a sinister symbolic life in the violent underworld of American racism. Dina Temple-Raston’s Death in Texas describes the “body art” of one scion of the local aristocracy: > His arms and back were a solid gallery of tattoos and racist symbols. A > menacing version of Woody Woodpecker sported a Klan robe on one arm and a tiny > black man dangled from a tree limb on the other. I advise forgoing an image search. The internet abounds with explanations of the semiotic link between picids and racist hatred, but no one seems to have noticed the obvious: that it all began with the action of one recalcitrant state legislature. On September 26, 1927, Bibb Graves, the governor of Alabama and “Exalted Cyclops” of the KKK, signed the law declaring the yellowhammer that state’s official bird. Not, note well, the “flicker,” which was the bird’s AOU name at the time, but the yellowhammer. Why that species, and why that name? Most state birds were selected for the beauty of their plumage or the charm of their song; a few owe the distinction to crass economic thinking (Rhode Island! Alaska! South Dakota!!). Only two were chosen on historical grounds: Delaware’s chicken, and Alabama’s big brown woodpecker. No need for me to craft a tendentious paraphrase. Here’s what the Alabama Department of Archives and History itself has to say about it: > Alabama has been known as the “Yellowhammer State” since the Civil War. The > yellowhammer nickname was applied to the Confederate soldiers from Alabama…. > On the sleeves, collars and coattails of the new calvary [sic] troop were bits > of brilliant yellow cloth. As the company rode past Company A, Will Arnett > cried out in greeting “Yellowhammer, Yellowhammer, flicker, flicker!” The > greeting brought a roar of laughter from the men and from that moment the > Huntsville soldiers were spoken of as the “yellowhammer company.” The term > quickly spread throughout the Confederate Army and all Alabama troops were > referred to unofficially as the “Yellowhammers.” When the Confederate Veterans > in Alabama were organized they took pride in being referred to as the > “Yellowhammers” and wore a yellowhammer feather in their caps or lapels during > reunions. Alabama’s bird is a pretty bird, with a distinctive voice and habits. But all that mattered in its selection was the chance to commemorate the men of that state who fought to destroy the Union and prop up the enslavement of one human by another. It’s no wonder that woodpeckers have become the secret handshake of people who believe, truly believe, that their lives would be better if we could only return to the days when ivory-billed woodpeckers still flashed through the woods of the south. [RW: I don’t know whether my 3x-great-grandfather met with any Alabamans, but this is what their war did to him, when as a member of Co. F, 17th Iowa Infantry, he > participated in the battles of Pittsburg Landing and Shiloh, and took part in > the many engagements which led to the evacuation of Corinth and Iuka. At the > camp at Clear Creek our subject was attacked with the intermittent fever. He > was removed to St. Louis, Mo., and placed in the Good Samaritan Hospital, > remaining there for some time, and was finally honorably discharged on account > of physical disability. At the time of his discharge he was so reduced in > flesh that he was merely a skeleton, with an epidermis stretched over it. He > rejoined his people in Nebraska [after] endur[ing] without a complaint the > terrible experiences had on the fields of Shiloh, Pittsburg Landing and Iuka. > Returning home he suffered for years, broken in health, but not in courage or > spirit.] CategoriesInformation POST NAVIGATION Previous PostPrevious Heard for the First Time Next PostNext Birding in Berlin Search for: Search FAVORITE LINKS * BHL Blog * Birding New Jersey * Birds and Art Tours * Celery Farm * Dendroica * Don Freiday * Hidden NJ * Jersey Birding * Kevin Bolton * Montclair BC * Morris and Somerset Cos., NJ * NAS: Bergen County * NJ Bird Records Committee * NJ Meadowlands * Records of New Jersey Birds * Sussex County BC * The ABA Blog * Tours and Private Guiding * View from the Cape * Voice of NJ Audubon * West Essex, NJ * Wild New Jersey * Woodcreeper RECENT POSTS * A Tennessee Warbler Nest and Its Fate * Two Early CBC’s * Belize: This Place Is Crazy * Crooked Tree and Birds Eye View Lodge * A Gadwall Blonde RECENT COMMENTS ARCHIVES Archives Select Month December 2024 (2) March 2024 (3) February 2024 (1) September 2023 (1) August 2023 (5) July 2023 (3) April 2023 (5) February 2023 (1) December 2021 (3) November 2021 (2) August 2021 (2) July 2021 (1) May 2021 (1) March 2021 (2) February 2021 (1) January 2021 (1) December 2020 (2) October 2020 (2) July 2020 (2) May 2020 (2) April 2020 (2) November 2019 (1) September 2019 (1) August 2019 (1) June 2019 (2) May 2019 (2) March 2019 (1) February 2019 (2) January 2019 (1) December 2018 (1) November 2018 (5) October 2018 (5) September 2018 (8) August 2018 (2) July 2018 (11) June 2018 (11) April 2018 (9) March 2018 (10) February 2018 (2) January 2018 (4) December 2017 (1) November 2017 (2) October 2017 (3) September 2017 (11) August 2017 (3) July 2017 (1) June 2017 (2) April 2017 (2) March 2017 (4) February 2017 (3) January 2017 (11) December 2016 (3) November 2016 (3) October 2016 (3) September 2016 (7) August 2016 (2) July 2016 (4) June 2016 (3) May 2016 (5) April 2016 (1) March 2016 (1) February 2016 (5) January 2016 (5) December 2015 (3) November 2015 (6) October 2015 (9) September 2015 (12) August 2015 (15) July 2015 (21) June 2015 (13) May 2015 (17) April 2015 (9) March 2015 (11) February 2015 (6) January 2015 (10) December 2014 (10) November 2014 (9) October 2014 (15) September 2014 (20) August 2014 (23) July 2014 (26) June 2014 (26) May 2014 (15) April 2014 (16) March 2014 (15) February 2014 (13) January 2014 (26) December 2013 (12) November 2013 (4) October 2013 (5) September 2013 (6) August 2013 (7) July 2013 (6) June 2013 (6) May 2013 (4) April 2013 (2) March 2013 (4) February 2013 (2) January 2013 (4) December 2012 (1) November 2012 (8) October 2012 (3) August 2012 (4) July 2012 (3) June 2012 (1) December 2011 (1) October 2011 (1) June 2011 (1) May 2011 (1) April 2011 (5) March 2011 (6) February 2011 (1) December 2010 (2) November 2010 (5) October 2010 (1) September 2010 (3) July 2010 (4) May 2010 (3) April 2010 (2) March 2010 (4) November 2009 (2) October 2009 (2) August 2009 (1) June 2009 (2) March 2009 (2) January 2009 (1) December 2008 (1) November 2008 (1) October 2008 (1) September 2008 (2) August 2008 (1) July 2008 (3) January 2008 (4) December 2007 (18) November 2007 (2) October 2007 (1) July 2007 (1) June 2007 (1) April 2007 (1) March 2007 (1) February 2007 (1) January 2007 (1) December 2006 (2) August 2006 (2) July 2006 (2) May 2006 (1) March 2006 (1) December 2005 (1) August 2005 (1) Subscribe in a reader CATEGORIES * 2013 ABA Bird of the Year * 2015 ABA Bird of the Year * 2015 Calendar Puzzle * 2018 ABA Bird of the Year * AOU Supplements * Bahamas * Baja California Sur * Bird Counts * birding * Birding Door County * Birding Festivals * Birding France * Birding New Jersey * Birding Provence * Birds and Art in Provence * Birds and Art in Tuscany * Birds and Art in Tuscany * Birding Italy * Birding Tuscany * Birds and Art Tours * Birdwords * Book Reviews * Houghton Mifflin * Princeton University Press * Bulgaria * Canada * Ecuador * Famous Birders * France * Germany * Germany Birds and Art * Grebe-a-Month * Guatemala * Guyana * Hybrids and introgressants * Information * Italy: Venice and the Po Delta * le lundi en Provence * Linnaean Society field trips * MEGA: Great Birds * Mexico * New Jersey * New Jersey Birding * New York * Online supplement to Sparrows of North America * Other People's Bird Books * Panama * Passenger Pigeon * Peterson Reference Guide to Sparrows * Quizzes * Rants * Recantations * Recent Sightings * Arizona * Iowa * Italy * Nebraska * New Mexico * Sonora * Texas * Tuscany * South Dakota * Trinidad and Tobago * Vancouver 2018 * VENT Birds and Art in Provence 2018 * VENT Tour: Birds and Art in Berlin and Brandenburg * VENT tour: Birds and Art in Burgundy * VENT Tour: Catalonia * Victor Emanuel Nature Tours * Weird Bird News * Wisconsin OTHER * Log in * Entries feed * Comments feed * WordPress.org Proudly powered by WordPress ✓ Thanks for sharing! 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