Gifford Pinchot
First Chief of the US Forest Service
1905-1910
Gifford Pinchot, was born on August 11, 1865, in Simsbury, Connecticut.
His family was well to do upper class merchants, politicians, and
land owners. Pinchot, as a young boy, took advantage of several
opportunities to visit foreign countries, as well as gain a good
education at some of the best eastern schools. When he entered Yale
in 1885, his father asked a question, "How would you like to
be a forester?" When asked, not a single American had made
forestry a profession. Gifford stated, "I had no more conception
of what it meant to be a forester than the man in the moon....But
at least a forester worked in the woods and with the woods and I
loved the woods and everything about them....My Father's suggestion
settled the question [of a career] in favor of forestry."
Neither Yale nor any other university offered a degree or even
a course in forestry, so Pinchot after graduation decided to study
the subject in Nancy, France. After a year of forestry school, he
returned to the United States to prepare for his lifelong work and
interest. He worked for three years as a resident forester for George
Vanderbilt's Biltmore Forest Estate at Asheville, NC. In 1895-97,
he became involved with the National Forest Commission created by
the National Academy of Sciences to travel through the West to investigate
forest public land for possible forest reserves. He was named chief
of the Division of Forestry in 1898.
The management of the forest reserves was transferred from the
Department of the Interior to Agriculture and the new Forest Service
in 1905. The chief, or forester, of the new Forest Service was Gifford
Pinchot. Pinchot, with President Theodore Roosevelt's willing approval,
restructured and professionalized the management of the national
forests, as well as greatly increased their area and number. He
had a strong hand in guiding the fledgling organization toward the
utilitarian philosophy of the "greatest good for the greatest
number." Pinchot added the phrase "in the long run"
to emphasize that forest management consists of long term decisions.
During his period in office, the Forest Service and the national
forests grew spectacularly. In 1905 the forest reserves numbered
60 units covering 56 million acres; in 1910 there were 150 national
forests covering 172 million acres. The pattern of effective organization
and management was set during Pinchot's administration, and "conservation"
(an idea he popularized) of natural resources in the broad sense
of wise use became a widely known concept and an accepted national
goal.
Gifford Pinchot is generally regarded as the "father"
of American conservation because of his great and unrelenting concern
for the protection of the American forests. He was the primary founder
of the Society of American Foresters, which first met at his home
in Washington in November 1900. He served as chief with great distinction,
motivating and providing leadership in the management of natural
resources and protection of the national forests. He continued as
forester until 1910, when he was fired by President Taft in a controversy
over coal claims in Alaska. He was replaced by Henry "Harry"
S. Graves.
The Gifford Pinchot National Forest is one of the oldest national forests in the
United States. The area was first included in the Mt. Rainier Forest Reserve
in 1897. Then this area was set aside as the Columbia National Forest in 1908.
Later in 1949, the name was changed in honor of our nations first Chief
of the US Forest Service, Gifford Pinchot.
Gifford Pinchot wrote: When I came home [from
France] not a single acre of Government, state, or private timberland
was under systematic forest management anywhere on the most richly
timbered of all continents....When the Gay Nineties began, the common
word for our forests was "inexhaustible." To waste timber
was a virtue and not a crime. There would always by plenty of timber....The
lumbermen...regarded forest devastation as normal and second growth
as a delusion of fools....And as for sustained yield, no such idea
had ever entered their heads. The few friends the forest had were
spoken of, when they were spoken of at all, as impractical theorists,
fanatics, or "denudatics," more or less touched in the
head. What talk there was about forest protection was no more to
the average American that the buzzing of a mosquito, and just about
as irritating (Breaking New Ground 1947: 27).
Without natural resources life itself is impossible. From birth
to death, natural resources, transformed for human use, feed, clothe,
shelter, and transport us. Upon them we depend for every material
necessity, comfort, convenience, and protection in our lives. Without
abundant resources prosperity is out of reach (Breaking New Ground
1947: 505).
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