My on-line search results for:

"Why is the CBC called the Christmas Bird Count"

were:
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The first CBC was done on Christmas Day of 1900 as an alternative  
activity to an event called the “side hunt” where people chose sides,  
then went out and shot as many birds as they could. The group that  
came in with the largest number of dead birds won the event. Frank  
Chapman, a famed ornithologist at the American Museum of Natural  
History and the editor of Bird-Lore (which became the publication of  
the National Association of Audubon Societies when that organization  
formed in 1905) recognized that declining bird populations could not  
withstand wanton over-hunting, and proposed to count birds on  
Christmas Day rather than shoot them.
______________________

Prior to the turn of the century, people engaged in a holiday  
tradition known as the Christmas "Side Hunt": They would choose sides  
and go afield with their guns; whoever brought in the biggest pile of  
feathered (and furred) quarry won.

Conservation was in its beginning stages around the turn of the 20th  
century, and many observers and scientists were becoming concerned  
about declining bird populations. Beginning on Christmas Day 1900,  
ornithologist Frank Chapman, an early officer in the then budding  
Audubon Society, proposed a new holiday tradition-a "Christmas Bird  
Census"-that would count birds in the holidays rather than hunt them.

So began the Christmas Bird Count. Thanks to the inspiration of Frank  
M. Chapman and the enthusiasm of twenty-seven dedicated birders,  
twenty-five Christmas Bird Counts were held that day. The locations  
ranged from Toronto, Ontario to Pacific Grove, California with most  
counts in or near the population centers of northeastern North  
America. Those original 27 Christmas Bird Counters tallied a total of  
90 species on all the counts combined.


Source: National Audubon Society
http://www.audubon.org/bird/cbc/history.html

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Above are multiple references  to CHRISTMAS - on the site of the  
official organization that is responsible for all of these BIRD  
COUNTS, with all historic reference to the person who originated them  
and in common and fully-accepted usage by almost all birders and  
others world-wide.) There was no intent & no desire to bring offense  
to anyone in those references by anyone posting bird count results to  
this list, including the results of the highly-regarded Brooklyn Bird  
Club or any counters.  Suggestions of such 'offense' are insulting to  
the original poster and a lot of birders who both enjoy & take  
seriously the efforts to count birds at this time of year.

Happy Winter Solstice today, to all life.

Tom Fiore,
Manhattan
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