001529178 001__ 1529178 001529178 005__ 20241006161128.0 001529178 02480 $$aMSS 287-021 001529178 037__ $$aDA 001529178 041__ $$aeng 001529178 245__ $$aBarless bear enclosure at Mesker Zoo in Evansville, Indiana 001529178 260__ $$bUniversity of Southern Indiana 001529178 269__ $$an.d. 001529178 347__ $$a600-800 dpi 001529178 520__ $$aBarless bear enclosure-- Mesker Zoo. Designed and built by Gilmore M. Haynie Evansville, Indiana. In 1916, Mesker Park was no more than a cluttered and undeveloped picnic area. Thanks to a $25,000 cash gift George Mesker gave to the city to purchase more land around the park, the dilapidated 50-acres became the site to one of the finest zoos in the country. Gilmore M. Haynie, visionary and proponent of the Park's transformation, became the executive secretary of the city park board in 1916, and later the board's president. Once Mesker's donation was realized, both Haynie and Mayor Benjamin Bosse created a plan to change the face of Mesker Park. The next 15 years saw weeds pulled, paths built, lights added, areas cleared, and a fine menagerie of random critters added to the planned zoo, featuring a goat, three rabbits, one raccoon, and six chickens. Belle and Brutus, the main attractions, were gifted lions from the American Circus Association, followed by a black bear from the Denver Zoo. On June 14, 1929, the park acquired its biggest creature when Kay, an 11,000-pound elephant, joined the team. Haynie utilized Works Progress Administration labor and efficient building strategies to do with $250,000 dollars what $2 million projected dollars would have done. He oversaw the design and construction of one the first barless bear exhibits in the country, followed by the unique, one-third concrete scale model of Christopher Columbus' Santa Maria, crewed by 20 rhesus monkeys. Haynie, whose wife Mildred founded Haynie Travel in 1938, was a world traveler who was inspired by zoos he visited in Germany for these ideas. Barless exhibits became the zoological standard for innovative and best practices largely due to the concepts he introduced in Evansville. In 1936, Mesker donated more funds to build the Mesker Amphitheatre that boasted seating room for 8,500. Mesker Park Zoo was rapidly becoming Evansville's number one attraction, receiving international renown for its ingenuity, creativity, and unique topographical use of space. During the zoo's initial design, Haynie contributed to another innovative barless den, this time for the lions, with spot-on botanical accuracy and an imitation African watering hole smack dab in the center of the zoo. It created a draw, says Amos Morris, current director of the zoo. The lions would stand on a pinnacle, and as you walk around the perimeter of the zoo you could almost always see them. (http://www.evansvilleliving.com/articles/its-a-zoo-out-there) Gilmore Haynie is the grandfather to the originator of this collection. 001529178 542__ $$fhttp://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-NC/1.0/ 001529178 6531_ $$aLocal Structures 001529178 6531_ $$aLocal Parks 001529178 6531_ $$aLocal History 001529178 6531_ $$aBuildings and Structures 001529178 6531_ $$aParks and Recreation 001529178 6531_ $$aPhotographs 001529178 6531_ $$aRegional History 001529178 6531_ $$aRelated Materials -- n.d. 001529178 655__ $$aBlack and White Photograph 001529178 691__ $$aIndiana 001529178 7001_ $$aUnknown 001529178 8564_ $$9d2290b93-63b9-4c3e-9b50-d7b993250f6d$$s3098499$$uhttps://library.usi.edu/record/1529178/files/5295.jpg 001529178 909CO $$ooai:library.usi.edu:1529178$$pGLOBAL_SET 001529178 914__ $$ap17218coll2 001529178 980__ $$aSpecial & Regional History Collection 001529178 984__ $$aBob Haynie Collection 001529178 985__ $$aImage