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Lawsuits Impact Wildlife Funding, Taxpayer Dollars

Legal defense costs are an increasing drain on conservation funding today.

More to the Score – 16 Heart-Stopping Entries – Volume 6

Spring 2022 Edition – What’s better than record-book antlers, horns, and skulls? The stories behind them, of course. This slideshow certainly has plenty of big bone at which to gawk. Dig deeper, though, and you’ll find so much more. There’s the coal miner from Virginia who drove to Newfoundland with two chest freezers to hunt woodland caribou. There is the hunter who killed the world’s record…

New Book Traces, Celebrates History of Elk Hunting

America's premiere big-game hunting historian, Boone and Crockett Club, has announced a new book that traces the evolution of elk hunting and records keeping from the late 1880s th

B&C Member Spotlight - Henry Fairfield Osborn

Henry Fairfield Osborn was admitted in 1899 as an Associate Member (now called Professional Member) and by 1913 had been elected as an Honorary Life Member. As of 2021, only 42 Members have been so honored.

New President of Boone and Crockett Club: Ben B. Wallace

Ben B. Wallace

A hunter, attorney, banker and businessman from Corpus Christi, Texas, Ben B.

A Catalog of Hunting and Conservating Success

It's a piece of hunting history; a catalog of conservation successes.

A New Kind of Zoo - B&C Impact Series

At the turn of the twentieth century, members of the Boone and Crockett Club changed the way the world looked at animals—literally. They designed a new kind of zoo, which educated visitors, eliminated cramped concrete cages and conserved rare species. We still use that model today. 

5 Reasons to Enter Your Trophy in B&C Records

Congratulations! You finally killed that trophy specimen that eluded you for many seasons and countless hunts.

B&C Member Spotlight - Theodore Roosevelt

In 1887, Theodore Roosevelt returned from his Elkhorn Ranch in the Dakota Territory with an idea. He would assemble a group of like-minded, influential men to turn the tide in favor of conserving our nation’s resources, which, at the time, was vanishing quickly.

The .270: America’s Cartridge

Its slim bullets killed all out of proportion to their weight, charming hunters and changing an industry.