In 1782, the bald eagle was chosen as our national symbol. However, by the mid to late 1800s, overhunting caused the eagle population to decline. Let's look at the next timeline entry: a quote from a book on birds published in 1895.
1895: 60–70 Eagles Shot on Long Island, NY
“An inveterate bully, [that obtained] a great part of its food by robbing the [Osprey], while perfectly able to fish for itself, [the bald eagle] is known to carry off lambs and young pigs, [and have] been vanquished in a fair fight by a rooster.”
Mabel Osgood Wright, Birdcraft: A Field Book of Two Hundred Song, Game, and Water Birds (New York: Macmillian, 1895).
So what was the problem facing the eagles? Put simply, the birds had a bad reputation. Although most of the bald eagles' diet consisted of fish and dead animals, they would occasionally prey on small farm animals. Eagles also hunted small birds species, which humans killed for sport and food. Although the eagles were not a serious menace to farm production or the population sizes of the small bird species, farmers and hunters shot eagles in large numbers because of the perceived threat.
Timeline Tip: Investigate Big Changes
Your timeline should include events from big shifts in the population size of a species due to human activity such as overpopulation, habitat destruction, pollution, introduction of invasive species, or climate change.