A duck decoy (or decoy duck) is a man-made object resembling a real
duck. Duck decoys are sometimes used in
waterfowl hunting to attract real ducks.
Duck decoys were historically
carved from wood, often
Atlantic white cedar wood on the east coast of the US from Maine to South Carolina,[1] or cork. Modern ones may also be made of canvas and
plastic. They are usually
painted elaborately and very accurately to resemble various kinds of waterfowl.
Native American people have been crafting and using duck decoys for hundreds of years.
Archaeologists discovered several decoys made from
tule plants and duck feathers, dating to about 300-100 BC in a
cave near
Lovelock, Nevada.[3] Many modern tribes have traditions of decoy crafting.[4][5]
Ever since
Joel Barber, the first known decoy collector, started in 1918, decoys have become increasingly viewed as an important form of North American
folk art. Barber's book
Wild Fowl Decoys, was the first book on decoys as collectible objects. It was followed in 1965 by folk art dealer
Adele Earnest's "The Art of the Decoy" and "American Bird Decoys" by collector Wm. F. Mackey.
By that time a milestone in collecting had already occurred with the publication of "Decoy Collectors Guide", a small magazine created by hobbyists Hal & Barbara Sorenson of Burlington, Iowa. The 'Guide' helped foster a sense of community and provided a forum for collectors to share their research.
By the 1970s decoys were becoming big business, at least by previous standards. The death of Wm. F. Mackey brought his decoys to market in a series of auctions in 1973 and 1974, with the star of his collection, a Long-billed Curlew by Wm. 'Bill' Bowman selling for a record US$10,500.
Since the 1960s numerous collectors organizations have been created, specialist books and magazines published, with specialist dealers, and special interest shows around the US and Canada. Canadian decoys are still believed to be the "sleepers" in the world of decoy popularity and are often undervalued but are starting to gain recognition.
The first million dollar price was achieved when two decoys (
Canada goose and a preening
pintail drake) by
A. Elmer Crowell of East Harwich, MA were said to have sold for US$1.13 million each in a private sale, in September 2007. The record-setting decoys were sold in a larger collection of 31 decoys for $7.5 million in total so it remains for a single decoy to clearly break the $1 million mark.[8]
Vintage factory decoys
Mason's decoy factory
The most famous of all factory-made decoys are Mason's which operated in
Detroit,
Michigan, from 1896 to 1924. Produced decoys in the same style as Peterson and Dodge. Produced five grades of decoys:
Challenge - both one piece solid and two-piece hollow bodies, flat bottoms, glass eyes, less elaborate paint on breast, no notch carved bill, lesser carved nostrils, painted black nail.
Standard #1 or "Detroit" (glass eyes) - smaller in stature, less carving, more paint detail, glass eyes.
Standard #2 (tack eye) - smaller in stature, less carving, somewhat less paint detail, tack eyes.
Standard #3 (painted eye) - smaller in stature, less carving, even less paint detail, painted eyes.
Other decoys
Peterson Decoy Factory – Began in 1873 by George Peterson in
Detroit,
Michigan. Sold factory to Jasper Dodge in 1883.
J.N. Dodge – Jasper N. Dodge (1829–1909) began his decoy production c. 1883 after purchasing the George Peterson Decoy Factory. Production ceased in 1905 and closed permanently in 1908.
William E. Pratt Manufacturing Co. – Established in 1893 in
Joliet, Illinois, did not begin to produce decoys until 1921. Eventually bought out by the Animal Trap Company of America which became Victor.
J.W. Reynolds Decoy Company – Established in
Chicago,
Illinois
H.A. Stevens – Harvey A. Stevens (d. 1894) began this factory in
Weedsport, New York from 1880 to 1902. Harvey had several brothers that helped out at the shop, but George was the only one that would carve and paint decoys under his own label. So, the two brothers made commercial decoys and they made them during two time periods. First, the tackeye decoy made between 1870 and about 1890 and then the improved glasseye decoy made thereafter until George retired in the early 1900s. The Stevens brothers made two models, the standard decoy and the sleeper "humpback" decoy.
Evans Factory – Walter Evans (1872–1948) was a large scale producer of fine hollow body duck decoys in
Ladysmith, Wisconsin from the 1921 to 1932. Similar in appearance to the Mason Factory decoy.
G&H Decoys, Inc. – Began in 1934 one year after the federal government in the United States ended the practice of live birds being used as decoys in the practice of hunting. Their original 'Henryettan' design is still manufactured today in their facility and home office just north of
Henryetta, Oklahoma.[9]
Wildfowler Decoys, Inc – Began in 1939, in
Old Saybrook, Connecticut. In 1957 the company had a tragic fire that destroyed the building and most of its contents, the company was sold and moved to
Quogue, New York. The company was bought by Charlie Birdsall in 1961, and moved to
Point Pleasant, New Jersey. It was subsequently relocated into
Babylon, New York in the mid-1970s. Occasionally, Wildfowler were contracted to produce decoys for the
Abercrombie & Fitch catalog.[10]
Mintz Decoys—Family owned business based out of Boise, Idaho and founded by master carver Don Mintz that pioneered the process of full body flocking on decoys, which creates a three-dimensional illusion and virtually eliminates all glare from the sun. Said to be far superior to regular, factory-produced decoys.
General Fibre Company - Began mass production of the Ariduk brand of fibre duck decoys in 1946. Based in
St. Louis, Missouri, the manufacturer produced mallards, pin tails, blue bills, black ducks, canvas backs, oversized mallards, and oversized black ducks. The company also produced goose decoys and crow shooter's kits.
Museums and collections
Det Grønne Museum (The Green Museum, national museum of hunting) - Denmark
^Tuohy, Donald R., and L. Kyle Napton. (1986). "Duck Decoys from Lovelock Cave, Nevada, Dated by 14C Accelerator Mass Spectrometry". American Antiquity: 51(4), pp. 81–816.