He brought to the office a fierce determination. So much so that he
was severely injured the first year in office. The Chief, as he was
known, was at a baseball game in his home county after several
flagrant poachers in the area had made it known they had no
intention of obeying Richardson or his wardens. The Chief was
advised not to attend the game, but he chose to ignore that advice.
He was attacked by six men and despite the odds he was, as one
newspaper put it, "efficiently making pacifists of his assailants."
A friend of the Chief's intervened and held the attackers off at
gunpoint. Only later was it discovered that Richardson had been
stabbed in the back, with one lung punctured.
Richardson always believed that wardens had to educate as well as
enforce and only by encouraging a sporting ethic, by fostering a
widespread recognition of the need for protection, could wildlife
truly be conserved. He spent much of the first year in office
getting acquainted with individual game wardens to better understand
just how effective law enforcement was throughout the state, and
what he discovered was disappointing. He dramatically reduced the
number of wardens, many of whom were honorary. One of the first he
removed was his own father.
He asked for more wardens and they be properly paid. He insisted
this would not cost the state anything, that enactment of a bill
providing for mandatory fish and game licenses would provide
funding.
Richardson worked tirelessly more than ten years before the state
passed laws requiring fishing licenses. The gist of the campaign was
such that it aided anglers, because passage of the law saw expanded
efforts at rearing and stocking fish.
By the time of Richardson's official retirement in 1958, he could
look back in pride to a number of accomplishments. He was
instrumental in developing game wardens into a profession, with
better training, uniforms and even vehicles with two-way radios.
He could also claim the lion's share of responsibility for numerous
laws such as shortened hunting seasons, laws against netting and
trapping game fish, and the outlawing of baiting wild turkeys. He
also took great pride in that after a few short years in office, the
department was entirely self-supporting financially throughout his
leadership.
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