Art and literature John James Audubon's painting of a prothonotary warbler is the third plate in
The Birds of America. The warbler has also been mentioned several times in literature. First, the warbler is mentioned in
A Sand County Almanac by
Aldo Leopold as the "jewel of my disease-ridden
woodlot", "as proof that dead trees are transmuted into living animals, and vice versa. When you doubt the wisdom of this arrangement, take a look at the prothonotary." Second, Kurt Vonnegut described the warbler as "the only birds that are housebroken in captivity" in his novel,
Jailbird. The Hiss-Chambers Hearing The prothonotary warbler became known to a wider audience in the 1940s as the bird that established a connection between
Whittaker Chambers and
Alger Hiss in front of the
House Un-American Activities Committee. On August 3, 1948, in a hearing before the committee, Chambers accused Hiss of being a communist spy who sought to infiltrate the U.S. government. Two days later, Hiss testified before the committee and claimed, among other things, that Chambers' allegations were false and that he did not know Chambers. However, future U.S. president,
Richard Nixon, who was then a freshman congressman on the committee, became convinced that Hiss had committed
perjury at the hearing. To verify this suspicion, the committee had Chambers appear before it again on August 7, 1948, to testify about his relationship with Hiss. At that hearing, Chambers testified that Hiss enjoyed
bird-watching, and once bragged to Chambers about seeing a prothonotary warbler along the
Potomac River. When Hiss appeared before the committee again, he haphazardly confirmed spotting a prothonotary warbler on the Potomac, causing many members of the committee to become convinced of the pair's acquaintance. Ultimately, the Hiss-Chambers hearing led, in part, to Nixon's political rise. ==Gallery==