The Wild Duck Chase: Inside the Strange and Wonderful World of the Federal Duck Stamp Contest

Competitive duck painting “borders on . . . obsession,” making this book about the Federal Duck Stamp Contest “a surprisingly compelling read” (Los Angeles Times).

The basis for the documentary film, The Million Dollar Duck, Martin J. Smith’s The Wild Duck Chase reveals the peculiar world of the only juried art competition run by the US government. Hatched during the Great Depression, the Federal Duck Stamp Program requires hunters to buy stamps to validate a hunting license, with proceeds going toward wetland conservation. Though the first stamps were designed by noted wildlife artists, a contest for new illustrators opened to the public in 1949. Over the years, the competition has attracted artists from across the nation and the stamp has generated more than $1 billion to purchase or lease more than 6 million acres of waterfowl habitat in the United States.

Smith takes readers behind the scenes of the contest to discover personalities like the Hautman brothers of Minnesota, painters with a success record that rivals that of the New York Yankees. Smith additionally probes the intense debate between rural hunters and the urban conservationists who condemn shooting wildlife for sport. There’s also the high-stakes drama between the artists competing and the judges who decide which work will be awarded the honor of appearing on the coveted, collectible stamp.

A front row seat to an arcane realm where talent, environmental activism, and migratory waterfowl come together to create big money and not a few controversies, The Wild Duck Chase gives this fascinating, little-known piece of Americana its due.

“Smartly written, wonderful. . . . Highly recommended!” ―Douglas Brinkley, author of Wilderness Warrior: Theodore Roosevelt and the Crusade for America

1110911664
The Wild Duck Chase: Inside the Strange and Wonderful World of the Federal Duck Stamp Contest

Competitive duck painting “borders on . . . obsession,” making this book about the Federal Duck Stamp Contest “a surprisingly compelling read” (Los Angeles Times).

The basis for the documentary film, The Million Dollar Duck, Martin J. Smith’s The Wild Duck Chase reveals the peculiar world of the only juried art competition run by the US government. Hatched during the Great Depression, the Federal Duck Stamp Program requires hunters to buy stamps to validate a hunting license, with proceeds going toward wetland conservation. Though the first stamps were designed by noted wildlife artists, a contest for new illustrators opened to the public in 1949. Over the years, the competition has attracted artists from across the nation and the stamp has generated more than $1 billion to purchase or lease more than 6 million acres of waterfowl habitat in the United States.

Smith takes readers behind the scenes of the contest to discover personalities like the Hautman brothers of Minnesota, painters with a success record that rivals that of the New York Yankees. Smith additionally probes the intense debate between rural hunters and the urban conservationists who condemn shooting wildlife for sport. There’s also the high-stakes drama between the artists competing and the judges who decide which work will be awarded the honor of appearing on the coveted, collectible stamp.

A front row seat to an arcane realm where talent, environmental activism, and migratory waterfowl come together to create big money and not a few controversies, The Wild Duck Chase gives this fascinating, little-known piece of Americana its due.

“Smartly written, wonderful. . . . Highly recommended!” ―Douglas Brinkley, author of Wilderness Warrior: Theodore Roosevelt and the Crusade for America

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The Wild Duck Chase: Inside the Strange and Wonderful World of the Federal Duck Stamp Contest

The Wild Duck Chase: Inside the Strange and Wonderful World of the Federal Duck Stamp Contest

by Martin J. Smith
The Wild Duck Chase: Inside the Strange and Wonderful World of the Federal Duck Stamp Contest

The Wild Duck Chase: Inside the Strange and Wonderful World of the Federal Duck Stamp Contest

by Martin J. Smith

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Overview

Competitive duck painting “borders on . . . obsession,” making this book about the Federal Duck Stamp Contest “a surprisingly compelling read” (Los Angeles Times).

The basis for the documentary film, The Million Dollar Duck, Martin J. Smith’s The Wild Duck Chase reveals the peculiar world of the only juried art competition run by the US government. Hatched during the Great Depression, the Federal Duck Stamp Program requires hunters to buy stamps to validate a hunting license, with proceeds going toward wetland conservation. Though the first stamps were designed by noted wildlife artists, a contest for new illustrators opened to the public in 1949. Over the years, the competition has attracted artists from across the nation and the stamp has generated more than $1 billion to purchase or lease more than 6 million acres of waterfowl habitat in the United States.

Smith takes readers behind the scenes of the contest to discover personalities like the Hautman brothers of Minnesota, painters with a success record that rivals that of the New York Yankees. Smith additionally probes the intense debate between rural hunters and the urban conservationists who condemn shooting wildlife for sport. There’s also the high-stakes drama between the artists competing and the judges who decide which work will be awarded the honor of appearing on the coveted, collectible stamp.

A front row seat to an arcane realm where talent, environmental activism, and migratory waterfowl come together to create big money and not a few controversies, The Wild Duck Chase gives this fascinating, little-known piece of Americana its due.

“Smartly written, wonderful. . . . Highly recommended!” ―Douglas Brinkley, author of Wilderness Warrior: Theodore Roosevelt and the Crusade for America


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9798337202129
Publisher: Open Road Media
Publication date: 08/05/2025
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
File size: 7 MB

About the Author

Martin J. Smith is a veteran journalist and magazine editor with more than fifty newspaper and magazine writing awards to his name. He is also the author of both suspense novels and nonfiction books, and his crime novels have been shortlisted for some of the publishing industry’s most prestigious honors, including the Edgar Award, the Anthony Award, and the Barry Award. Smith’s recent work, Going to Trinidad, was a finalist for a Colorado Book Award.

Table of Contents

Prologue 1

Chapter 1 The Hunters Gather 4

Chapter 2 The First Battle of Specklebelly 19

Chapter 3 Guns, Greed, and the Grand Idea 35

Chapter 4 Round One 58

Chapter 5 The Second Battle of Specklebelly 79

Chapter 6 The Annual Ordeal of Artistic Choices 99

Chapter 7 The Power of the Prize 116

Chapter 8 Round Two 129

Chapter 9 What Is Art, Anyway? 146

Chapter 10 Round Three 168

Chapter 11 The Looming Threats 177

Chapter 12 The Hunter-Hugger Schism 196

Chapter 13 Judgment Day: The Tiebreak Round 205

Chapter 14 Where the Wild Things Are 215

Appendix A How to Buy a Duck Stamp 229

Appendix B The Federal Duck Stamp Artists 231

Appendix C The Imitators 235

Acknowledgments 237

Notes 241

List of Illustrations 253

Index 255

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