Frank Buck Zoo
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Frank Buck Zoo is a small zoo founded in 1930 and located in the Leonard Park in Gainesville, Texas, United States. The zoo started as the Gainesville Community Circus in 1930. It is home to more than 130 animals.


History

The zoo was founded by A. Morton Smith as Gainesville Community Circus, and opened in 1930 at the Cooke County Fair, Fair Park, in Gainesville. A fire at the zoo in 1954 destroyed circus equipment and from 1954 the animals were kept permanently in enclosures. In 1954 the zoo was renamed after the film actor and director (and Gainesville native) Frank Buck, who collected wild animals from all over the world, and who also worked as a ring master at the zoo. The zoo was moved to its current location in Leonard Park in 1962. The Frank Buck Exhibit opened at the zoo in March 2008 showing items donated by Buck's daughter, Barbara Buck, that once belonged to her father including camp tools and media memorabilia. In 2020, Frank Buck Zoo won an award from the ZAA for their renovated prairie dog enclosure.


Facilities

The handicap and stroller accessible path around the zoo is about a mile long, with an elevated walkway over the Bennet's and
swamp wallaby The swamp wallaby (''Wallabia bicolor'') is a small macropod marsupial of eastern Australia. This wallaby is also commonly known as the black wallaby, with other names including black-tailed wallaby, fern wallaby, black pademelon, stinker (in Q ...
and the African savanna, with giraffe,
common ostrich The common ostrich (''Struthio camelus''), or simply ostrich, is a species of flightless bird native to certain large areas of Africa and is the largest living bird species. It is one of two extant species of ostriches, the only living members o ...
, helmeted guinea fowl and Nubian ibex. Visitors see the giraffes at eye level and can feed them during the public feeding every day. Frank Buck Zoo is also home to many other different species of animals from across the world, with Asian small clawed otters, Chilean flamingos, American black bears, and many other animals.


Notes


External links

* * {{authority control Zoos in Texas 1930 establishments in Texas Buildings and structures in Cooke County, Texas Tourist attractions in Cooke County, Texas Educational organizations established in 1930 Zoos established in the 1930s