
Wakelin
'Ranger Mac' McNeel
1884-1958
Inducted 2006
"Statistics are dull. Kids prefer down-to-earth
realism." – McNeel
The kind-faced gentleman
pictured here was an early genius in
mass media. Wakelin McNeel, "Ranger Mac,” reached
an estimated 700,000 young people in
Wisconsin with his Wisconsin Public Radio
program, “Afield
With Ranger Mac.” The program ran
between 1933-54, reaching out to students
in one-room school houses and big city
schools alike with colorful but knowledge-filled
messages about conservation and nature.
The mere mention of “Ranger Mac” evokes
warm memories among those who looked forward
to his program each week.
McNeel described his
preference for using non-technical language
to teach children about the environment
this way: “Statistics
are dull. Kids prefer down-to-earth realism.
Every creature has some place in the scheme
of nature, from the angleworm that buries
in the ground to the hawk that swings at
anchor in the sky.”
Children loved the program,
but its influence was also well understood
by adults and the broadcast industry. It
received the prestigious Peabody Award
for broadcast excellence in 1942.
It was
fitting that devotion to the outdoors
and conservation emerged in McNeel’s
own youth. He spent his childhood canoeing,
fishing, hunting, and camping in his
birthplace of Kilbourn (now Wisconsin
Dells). McNeel graduated from Lawrence
College in 1906 and went to work as
a teacher and administrator at Black River
Falls High School in Tomah. He attended
the renowned Biltmore Forestry School in Michigan.
He taught science to students in the education
curriculum at Whitewater Normal School
before being named superintendent of
the Fort Atkinson School District in
1912. During the final year of World
War I, McNeel went to France to work
with the YMCA in coordinating athletic
activities for soldiers.
Upon his return,
McNeel was employed by Marathon County
4-H to promote youth nature activities.
Later, the University of Wisconsin-Madison
hired McNeel as a professor of agriculture
and a forestry extension agent. Working
in these capacities, McNeel swiftly began
to focus on conservation education, and
launched Afield with Ranger Mac in 1933.
He had a hand in helping Wisconsin to
develop an elementary school conservation
curriculum, and fashioned the radio program
around that curriculum requirement.
He took children on field
trips, and was influential in the establishment
of Upham Woods, a 4-H environmental education
camp in the Wisconsin Dells. The center
was created in 1941, after McNeel secured
the Upham family’s donation of a
300-acre plot of land.
When McNeel retired in
1950, he dedicated himself to the camp’s
development, and now the nationally acclaimed
Camp Upham Woods is attended by 10,000
youths each year. The camp is a quiet
refuge in the heavily developed Dells
tourism area.
McNeel’s dedication to conservation
in Wisconsin earned him numerous accolades
throughout his lifetime. Most notably,
McNeel was inducted into the Wisconsin
Forestry Hall of Fame in 1995 and the National
4-H Hall of Fame in 2002.
Many years after
his program has come and gone, the memories
linger for those who loved it. A Wisconsin
State Journal article on McNeel in
2002 evoked an outpouring of memories
from readers. Among them was noted Wisconsin
rural life author Jerry Apps, who wrote: “As
a Waushara County farm kid attending a one-room
county school back in the 1940s, I listened
to Ranger Mac’s programs
each week. We all did. You'd think as country
kids we knew about nature and the outdoors;
we did to a point. But Ranger Mac added to
what we knew in an interesting ‘you’ve
got to keep listening’ way. He ranks
right up there with Aldo Leopold, John Muir,
and other Wisconsin environmental heroes.”
FACTS
• Wisconsin Public Radio program “Afield
With Ranger Mac” reached an estimated 700,000
young people in the 1930s, '40s and '50s
• Program won the prestigious national Peabody
Award
• Helped establish Wisconsin’s elementary
conservation curriculum
• Influential in establishing Camp Upham Woods
For further information on
Wakelin "Ranger Mac" McNeel, read his Hall
of Fame monograph.
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