Heath Hens and Habitat
Susan B. Whiting

I sincerely doubt if heath hens were re-introduced to the Vineyard that they would make it through one season.

Read More

Historic Film Shows Heath Hens Alive and Dancing on Vineyard
Tom Dunlop

The last heath hen disappeared from Martha's Vineyard in 1932 and the species declared extinct in 1933.

Read More

Once Flourishing Heath Hen Made Its Last Stand on Island
Sara Brown

The heath hen’s story of decline and extinction has become inextricably linked to Martha’s Vineyard.

Read More

Heath Hen Raises Bar on De-Extinction Debate
Sara Brown

The heath hen is at the center of a new effort and a new debate on the Island, as scientific advances have made de-extinction a possibility.

Read More

Never Say Never; Heath Hen May Get Its Boom Back
Sara Brown

The heath hen is currently being proposed as a possibility for de-extinction by an organization that aims to coordinate projects that use genetics to rescue endangered and extinct species.

Read More

New Research: Island's Extinct Heath Hen Was a Unique Bird
Tom Dunlop

Now a genetic study of the skins of scores of heath hens, all of them from the Vineyard, shows that the Island bird, although it looked and behaved much like its supposed parent species in the Midwest, was a wholly distinctive creature. Genetically it was more different from the greater western prairie chicken - that supposed parent species - than the Midwestern bird is from any other family member in its genus, which includes the lesser prairie chicken, the endangered Attwater's prairie chicken of eastern Texas, and even the sharp-tailed grouse. It is possible that instead of being a subspecies of the prairie chicken - which scientists have considered it to be since it was first typed in the last years of the nineteenth century - the heath hen might have been a species unto itself.

Read More

Gazette Chronicle: The Last Heath Hen
Cynthia Meisner

The Last Heath Hen

From the Vineyard Gazette editions of March, 1933:

Read More

The Ballad Of Boomin’ Ben

Note: The  Heath Hen, once a plentiful bird throughout New England, was last seen by James Green in West Tisbury on March 11, 1932.

The Ballad Of Boomin’ Ben

(The Tragic Tale of the Last Heath Hen)

I looked for my lady,

hoped she was near

playing “hard-to-get” games

in the Spring of that year.

I searched and I searched 

under brush, by the sea;

Read More

Booming Ben the Heath Hen Visits Camp
Olivia Hull

How do you get kids to care about a bird that no longer flies to the treetops, nor whistles to greet the day? Appeal to their senses and their incomparable imaginative faculties, says Todd McGrain, artist, arts educator and activist.

Mr. McGrain did just that last week, during his visit to Sense of Wonder Creations summer camp, when he asked children to touch a reproduction heath hen, listen to its call and imagine what it must have looked like.

Read More

Pages