In a move decried by some of its chapters and members, the National Audubon Society’s board voted this week to retain the name of artist and illustrator John James Audubon, who bought and sold Black people and ransacked native burial sites.

Citing “critical threats” to the nation’s birds, the organization said its decision would allow it to focus time and resources on conservation and promoting equity and inclusion, while acknowledging its namesake’s racist legacy.

Audubon was “an enslaver, whose racism and harmful attitudes toward Black and Indigenous people are now well-understood,” the society stated.

Evaluation of a potential name change began last year, with surveys and feedback from people inside and outside the organization, wrote Elizabeth Gray, the society’s chief executive officer. But ultimately, the board decided the society “transcends one person’s name.”

“‘Audubon has come to symbolize our mission and significant achievements that this organization has made in its long history,” the group stated.

Reaction was swift. 

“I was disappointed, but not surprised,” said Tykee James, president of the society’s Washington, D.C. chapter. He expects the “shortsighted” decision to further divide the group’s 1.9 million members.

Who was John James Audubon? 

A naturalist and illustrator, Audubon traveled North America in the early 1800s to document its birds, collecting and painting them. He gained great fame after producing a set of large plates with life-sized bird paintings that were bound into books.

“There can be no doubt of the impact of his life’s work and passion for birds,” Gray wrote.

The society was named 50 years after his death, when a founder, George Bird Grinnell, who had been tutored by Audubon’s widow Lucy, chose the name because of the artist’s contributions to ornithology. 

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