In 1993, the Quality Deer Management Association and the D.B. Warnell School of Forest Resources at the University of Georgia produced A History of White-Tailed Deer Restocking, a book co-authored by J. Scott McDonald and Dr. Karl V. Miller, tracing deer restoration from 1878 to 2004. Overall, about 3,000 Wisconsin whitetails (O. borealis) were stocked throughout the South, with Tennessee (662) the primary recipient. But efforts to reestablish or boost existing deer populations differed from state to state.
North Carolina’s restocking program began in 1890 in what would become the Pisgah Game Preserve. Over time, 3,319 whitetails, mostly in-state specimens, were used to bolster declining populations. In South Carolina, all restocked deer were trapped and relocated within the state. Florida stocked deer from seven states, including 616 from Wisconsin. Georgia…