|
March 17, 2008 – Gainesville, TX: In honor of Frank Buck’s
birthday the Frank Buck Zoo of Gainesville, TX will be celebrating
with “one buck” admission from everyone that comes through
the gate, cupcakes while they last, and the opening of a brand new
Frank Buck exhibit funded by the Frank Buck Zoological Society.
The is the only known Frank Buck exhibit in the world. Items for
the exhibit were donated by Frank Buck’s family who still
reside in Texas today.
Zoo Director, Susan Kleven, arranged for the exhibit to be assembled
and housed at the Frank Buck Zoo in Gainesville after meeting Frank
Buck’s daughter Barbara at the zoo’s annual Zoobilee
fundraiser hosted by the Zoological Society. Barbara was so impressed
by the zoo named for her father and the community of Gainesville
she decided there was no better place to exhibit her father’s
legacy. The exhibit will commemorate the life and times of Gainesville
native, Frank “Bring Em’ Back Alive” Buck, who
is considered a pioneer of the zoo world. He captured alive many
species of animals using traps and snares to prevent injury to the
animals. He relied heavily on the help of native peoples, establishing
an animal compound in Singapore, from which he shipped animals to
zoos in the United States and eventually throughout the world.
In 1934 Frank Buck’s Jungle Camp exhibit at the World’s
Fair in Chicago was visited and enjoyed by over 2 million people
and his 1940 Jungleland exhibit at the World’s Fair in New
York was visited and enjoyed by over 3 million people.
Frank Buck collaborated with three different authors on eight books
during his lifetime including: Bring Em’ Back Alive (1930),
Wild Cargo (1932), Fang and Claw (1935), a novel Tim Thompson in
the Jungle (1935), On Jungle Trails (1937), autobiography All in
a Lifetime (1941)and an illustrated children’s book Jungle
Animals (1945). His autobiography All in a Lifetime was for many
years required reading for sixth graders in the Texas Public School
system.
Frank Buck’s 1932 film version of Bring Em’ Back Alive
was considered a blockbuster, 82,660 people saw the film during
the first week of release. Beating the previous record held by the
movie Frankenstein. Frank Bucks other film credits included Wild
Cargo (1934), Fang and Claw (1935), Jungle Menace (1937), Jungle
Cavalcade (1941), Jacare (1942) Abbott & Costello’s Africa
Screams (1949).
Frank Buck’s celebrity became so great that he became the
most in-demand radio guest in the Untied States. His pith helmet
and the phrase “Bring ‘Em back Alive” became the
symbols of his celebrity. In 1948 he revisited Gainesville where
he acted as honorary ring master to the Gainesville Community Circus.
Frank Buck concentrated on capturing and preserving the world’s
wildlife. His efforts played a large role in making American’s
aware of how important it is to conserve the vast treasure that
is our native wildlife. He placed animals into environments in which
they could breed and propagate without the threat of extinction.
Thus Frank Buck was one of the first wildlife conservationist.
|