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America's Oldest Zoo Goes Green!

Posted by:Dan on April 13th, 2011
1302734981History_pa_philadelphia_zoo

Like many other Philadelphia landmarks and institutions, the Philadelphia Zoo is an American first. Since the early 1700′s, the idea of an American zoo was inspired by English settlers with a keen interest in wildlife and by sailors and hunters who returned from faraway lands with exotic animals they’d never seen before. People would gather and pay shillings to see animals such as lions and elephants displayed at places like general stores and museums. As a hub of scientific inquiry and discovery over many years, Philadelphia’s well-known leaders of the time began to formulate the idea of a zoo. In the mid-1850′s, a prominent Philadelphia physician, Dr. William Camac the Zoo’s founding father-became involved and led the way to making America’s first zoo a reality.

The charter establishing the Zoological Society of Philadelphia was approved and signed on March 21, 1859. Due to the Civil War, however, it was another 15 years before America’s first zoo was ready to open. The Zoo opened its gates on July 1, 1874. The Frank Furness Victorian gates and gatehouses, and the Zoo’s location, are the same today as they were on the day it opened. One of its assets, then and now, is John Penn’s home, The Solitude, which sat on the land chosen for the Zoo. John Penn was the grandson of William Penn, founder of Pennsylvania. The Solitude is considered to be Philadelphia’s most precise and elegant expression of neoclassical style.

On opening day, flags flew, and a brass band welcomed more than 3,000 visitors. Admission was 25 cents for adults and 10 cents for children, a rate that held for the next half century. Visitors came on foot, on streetcars, by horse and carriage, and every 15 minutes by steamboat on the Schuylkill River, landing at the Zoo’s own wharf. The Girard Avenue Bridge opened three days later.

In its first year of operation, the Philadelphia Zoo had 813 animals and received well over 228,000 visitors. Today, the Zoo has more than 1,300 rare and endangered animals, and its attendance is approximately 1.1 million visitors a year.

The zoo is also one step closer to fulfilling its energy conservation goals with its new affiliation with GDF SUEZ Energy Resources. GDF SUEZ Energy NA will supply its electricity to the zoo over the next two year, utilizing electricity generated from wind, solar and other local renewable power facilities. The zoo will be able to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 6,391,980 pounds disposed over the two year contract To put it in more tangible terms, it’s the equivalent of taking 314 cars off the road in one year!

Dr. Camac and John Penn would surely approve!

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