In 1915-17, Baldwin conducted research at four stations (marked A–D) on a plantation in Thomasville, Georgia. This plantation was almost certainly among those owned by Howard M. Hanna (Marcus A. Hanna's younger brother) of Cleveland, whose sister Lilian Hanna married Baldwin in 1899. In fact, they were married in Thomasville but returned to Cleveland to live. Before Florida became a more favored place to "winter," many wealthy northerners had winter homes in Thomasville. Quail hunting was the most favored activity – a real contrast to Baldwin's bird interests. | Creator: A. W. Moller | Source: S. Prentiss Baldwin. Scientific Publications of the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Vol. I, No. 5: Bird Banding by Systematic Trapping. Cleveland: Cleveland Museum of Natural History, 1931. Smithsonian Libraries. www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/122679#page/16/mode/1up.Download Original File
Creator
A. W. Moller
Source
S. Prentiss Baldwin. Scientific Publications of the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Vol. I, No. 5: Bird Banding by Systematic Trapping. Cleveland: Cleveland Museum of Natural History, 1931. Smithsonian Libraries. www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/122679#page/16/mode/1up.