The Palo Alto History Project
The Palo Alto Humane Society                                                
  
                                                                                 48 University Avenue      
The Humane Society: A Century of Compassion

There was a time when the life of a city animal was a lot less domesticated than it is today.  Before the era of
leash laws, license tags, pooper scoopers and pet daycare, city life for dogs and cats ran a little closer to the
wild side.  Without the laws that have set today’s familiar pet and master routines, our four-legged friends
enjoyed an independence that allowed them to roam the neighborhoods and seek out adventure.  Today,
some longtime pet lovers may still have fond memories for those old neighborhood dogs waiting for their boy
masters at the school each day or chasing down speeding cars.  But of course, with such adventures also
came the danger and potential cruelties of a life not so sheltered by an owner with a leash in hand.  Luckily,
in Palo Alto there was a group of concerned citizens always looking out for the city’s furry friends.

This year the Palo Alto Humane Society celebrates its 100th birthday as protector of Palo Alto’s animal
population.  This non-profit group has been responsible through the years for such tasks as running the city
pound, treating hurt and stray animals, monitoring the conditions of farm animals and preventing animal
cruelty.  It has been said that a society is ultimately judged by how it treats its weakest and most vulnerable
members.  If so, then Palo Alto owes a debt of gratitude for the 100 years of service that PAHS has spent
advocating for the city’s voiceless and vulnerable.

The Palo Alto Humane Society’s long history dates back to old Mrs. B.C. Merriman, which as legend has it,
once rode the Palo Alto streets whip in hand, ready to teach a lesson to any driver she saw mistreating his
horse.  The Society’s early membership roles included Stanford’s first president, David Starr Jordan and
Mrs. Jane Stanford herself, both of who helped push for the city’s first horse watering trough in the days
before automobiles.   

But it wasn’t really until 1924 that the PAHS found its voice.  That year Police Chief C.F. Noble issued a
crackdown on dogs roaming the streets without licenses.  Playing the villain to a tee, Noble hired a man
named “Dick the Dogcatcher” to enforce justice.  Soon the papers were full of letters from readers
complaining about maimed dogs that had been swiped from their home yards and porches.  One man wrote
in to the Palo Alto Times complaining that his dog had never been the same after it was impounded and that
it had become a “wild-eyed creature with deep bites about the head and body.”  There was also some
history of the local police operating with a “shoot on site” policy for strays.  

Clearly, there was a need for the Humane Society to help safeguard the city’s pets and strays from this
rather overzealous police force.  But the PAHS had little money and no land on which to construct a shelter.  
Enter, Mrs. Frank Thomas (as she was always referred to in the papers of the day), a Middlefield Road
resident who was known for taking in as many stray pets as her home and husband would allow.  Before
long, the PAHS had set up kennels in her yard and acquired her services to take care of the animals being
rounded up all over the city.  And although it was supposed to be just a temporary arrangement, Mrs.
Thomas wound up donating her home and time for more than two years before the city spent $2000 to build
a makeshift pound.

A decade later, the PAHS was able to finally build a first-rate shelter thanks in part to an $11,000 donation
from Mrs. Marguerite Ravenscroft of Santa Barbara.  The new quarters which stood at the current location
of El Camino’s Sheraton Hotel was described by the Palo Alto Times in 1947 as a kind of “animal utopia,”
complete with air-conditioning, heating and beds for some 50 dogs and 25 cats.  The shelter also included
full kitchen service for animal meal preparation, one-way receiving kennels where lost animals could be
dropped off after hours and a tiled tub for bathing dogs.  

Indeed contemporary newspaper accounts tell of a happy animal atmosphere, full of characters such as
“Trigger,” a quick and feisty feline who after catching her daily allotment of mice and rats, would head out to
the parking lot and clear out the gophers.  Moving at a slower pace was ‘Ol Pa, a desert turtle who enjoyed
promenading along the kennel fence torturing the yelping puppies below.  

But the shelter took care of more than just dogs, cats and the occasional turtle.   Monkeys, raccoons,
porcupines, ducks, turtles and skunks all found their way onto the shelter roster in those days ---not to
mention a rare visit from a wolf and a crocodile.  The shelter also employed an ambulance service for sick
and injured animals around town.  During World War II, the Society was able to use its vehicle capabilities
to save dozens of animals that
Japanese-Americans were forced to leave behind during their internment in
war camps.

Education has always been an important tenant of the Palo Alto Humane Society’s mission.    In its early
days, the PAHS visited schools to teach children the proper way to treat animals through films, poster
contests and parades --- even organizing a “Band of Mercy” to encourage children to keep an eye out for
local animals.

But when educating the community was not enough, the Society was not afraid to use legal action to protect
animals in Palo Alto.  For instance, the PAHS’s annual report from 1939 details how 5 offenders were
taken before judges that year after failing to heed the Humane Society’s warnings for improperly chaining
their dogs.  In 1984, the PAHS brought a lawsuit against Stanford University and the Veterans
Administration for abuse in the care of a white Samoyed dog named Snowball who was found with open
wounds and incisions.

When legal action was not possible, the Society sometimes found other ways to help animals in need.  In one
case, the PAHS purchased a blind horse to take it out of the “horse-trading racket,” putting it out to pasture
with other older horses at Mrs. Frances Newhall Wood’s appropriately-named “Hawthorne Happy Home
for Horses.”  Other times the Society’s work took them off the Peninsula.  During the terrible Sacramento
floods of 1940, PAHS officers travelled more than 21,000 miles to rescue stray, sick and abandoned
animals.

During the 1960s, the Humane Society responded to the times by becoming more involved in political
issues.  For instance, in 1961 PAHS President Gerald Dalmadge took a firm stand against Stanford
University School of Medicine’s desire to use the shelter’s unclaimed animals for research.  Citing the
agreement with which Mrs. Ravenscroft originally gave $11,000 to help built the shelter in 1937, Dalmadge
said that it would be a “violation of the principals under which the shelter was established.”  Eventually
Stanford withdrew its request citing “strong public reaction.”

In 1972 the Humane Society ceded control of the shelter to the city.  Since that time, PAHS has remained
heavily involved in advocacy and education --- or as they put it: “Instead of managing animals inside a
shelter, we work to keep animals out of the shelter.” They spay 1,000 homeless animals and pets in need
annually, provide for emergency rescue care, maintain a hotline for animal-related questions and are
designing an elementary classroom curriculum for California schools.  In the past two decades, PAHS has
also flexed political muscle by rallying against greyhound racing, steel jaw leg hold traps and decompression
chambers for euthanizing.  PAHS is also launching Humane Planet, a program to promote humane dining
options

And just this past month, the PAHS has fought hard for Proposition 2, a ballot initiative that sought to
eliminate the cruel confinement of California farm animals.  Indeed, last week’s passage of Prop 2
demonstrates that while “Dick the Dogcatcher” may be long gone, there is still much to do as the Palo Alto
Humane Society heads into its second century.
                                                                                                            -Matt Bowling
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Sources:
Palo Alto Historical Association, Palo Alto Weekly, Palo Alto Times,
Palo Alto Humane Society, Wikipedia
A horse, before and after.
The new Palo Alto Shelter in
1937. (PAHS)
Former PAHS president
Gerald Damadge inquires after
a cat. (PAHS)
A dog is chained to a tree in
Palo Alto. (PAHS)
The first city pound that was
not in a backyard. (PAHS)
PAHS mascots voted Yes on 2.
(PAHS)
Memories added by our readers:
This old photo shows a horse
in a bad state. (PAHS)
Today's PAHS headquarters
which is located in Menlo Park.
(PAHS)
Dogs once had a much more
independent life in Palo Alto.
(PAHS)