
Centennial Notes Archives
Our Final Centennial Note
Daughter of Maryland’s First State Forester
Celebrated 100th Birthday by
Officiating
at the
Maryland State Forest & Park Service
Centennial Time Capsule
Ceremony
Gambrill State Park- July 31, 2007
"The simple fact is that she has lived through and
participated in the whole century of forestry and parks which we have been
honoring for the last year and a half. It is no wonder that Maryland’s forest
and park historians fell in love with her when they began to collect information
for the Centennial two years ago. Her clear mind and astonishing memory has
been an invaluable resource for all of us. When historians had questions about
the life of Fred Besley or his views on many issues, Holly was often the
ultimate authority. Ross Kimmel, Offut Johnson, Champ Zumbrun and Robert Bailey
who are here with us today can all attest to this. The Centennial would simply
hot have been the same without her." - Kirk P. Rodgers |
Daughter of Maryland’s First State Forester
to Celebrate 100th Birthday
Officiating at the
Maryland State Forest & Park Service
Centennial Time Capsule
Ceremony
On July 31, 2007, Helen “Holly” Besley
Overington, daughter of Maryland’s legendary first State Forester, Fred
W. Besley, will celebrate her 100th birthday by officiating at the
Maryland State Forest & Park Service Centennial Time Capsule Ceremony. Holly
will throw the first ceremonial hand-full of dirt to help bury the Time Capsule
at Gambrill State Park, just outside of Frederick. Ms. Overington and other descendants of Fred W. Besley
participated in several State Forest & Park Service Centennial events throughout
the past year, adding their personnel touch to the history of the Maryland State
Forest & Park Service. The Forest Service originated in April 1906 when
Besley was named Maryland’s first State Forester. He was one of only
three state foresters in the country at the time. |
|
Kirk P. Rodgers Address
Patapsco Valley State
Park 100th Anniversary Event -
June 4, 2007
A hundred years ago John Glenn’s gift of 43 acres of the Hilton Estate to
the Board of Forestry marked a turning point in the history of Maryland’s
forests and parks. It is an event worthy of celebration and I am honored
to be part of it. In April of this year I had the pleasure of standing
next to Robert Garrett to recognize another turning point in Maryland’s history.
His family’s 1906 donation of 1200 acres of forest land in Western Maryland
mandated the creation of a Maryland Forest Service and launched the centennial
which we have been celebrating for the past year. These two farsighted
men, John Glenn and Robert Garrett, deserve great credit for their wisdom as
well as their generosity and the interaction between the processes which they
launched is a matter of fascination to historians. - Kirk P. Rodgers |
Kirk P. Rodgers Address Garrett State Forest Dedication Ceremony
The Garrett family’s gift of this land to the State of Maryland in 1906, and the
conditions that were attached to that gift..launched a process of change in how we manage our forests that all
Marylanders can feel proud of today. It signaled the beginning of the century
of accomplishment in scientific management of forests and parks that we have
been honoring for the past year and a half in our celebration of the Maryland
Forestry and Parks Centennial (1906-2006). I am proud to be standing here with
the grandson of Robert Garrett to pay tribute to that moment and to recognize
the role that our forbearers played in what happened a century ago and in what
we see around us today. - Kirk P. Rodgers |
Garrett State Forest Dedication Ceremony
Steven W. Koehn, Maryland State Forester, addressed an audience on April 10th to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the date that Maryland’s first State Forester, Fred W. Besley, recorded the deed to the Garrett brothers’ land donation on April 10th, 1907 at 8 AM in the Garrett County Court House., "…for the purposes mentioned in Sec. 3 Chap.294 of Acts of MD 1906" – what we call today the Forest Conservation Act of 1906. It was this donation of 1,917.5 acres that served as the starting point for what are now the Maryland State Forestry Service and State Park Service, which together manage nearly 500,000 acres of public lands. This event also marked the opening of the Kindness Forestry Demonstration Area.
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Maryland Forestry—1942-1977
James Mallow, Maryland’s State Forester from 1995 to 2001, looks back at three
of his predecessors, who served as State Foresters after the resignation of Fred
W. Besley: Joe Kaylor, Henry C. Buckingham, and A.R. “Pete” Bond. Mr. Mallow
cites Joe Kaylor’s major contribution in recognizing early on the importance and
relationship between forests and the watershed scale of those forests. In a 1957
article in the Department’s newsletter, The Old Line Acorn, Kaylor noted
“the Department has the first try at saving, increasing, or improving both the
quantity and quality of our water supplies, since watershed improvement is
primarily a forestry issue.” He also notes that Maryland’s current State
Forester, Steve Koehn’s oft spoken phrase - “forests are the solution to water
pollution” - needs to get more press time. |
Our History – Our Roots
“This is a pivotal time in the history of the state and private forestlands. It
is a moment that cries out for a new cadre of charismatic and influential forest
conservation leaders,” remarked Steven W. Koehn, Maryland State Forester, during
an address he gave for the Maryland Forests Association Conference Annual
Meeting. “If the history of state and private forests in Maryland reveals
anything, it is that land and people are intertwined throughout that history..
Now is the time for all of us to step forward and become the catalyst . . .
calling out the visionary, charismatic and influential from within our own ranks
and from across the breadth of our state’s forestry community to lay the
foundation for the next century of progress.” |
Maryland
Forests - Providing More Than Just Wood and Recreation
“Trees are key to reversing the declining health of the Bay and providing
clean water to Maryland’s ever-increasing population is the protection and
establishment of forest lands. A healthy forested watershed is no accident and
needs management to maintain vigor in the face of invasive insects and diseases,
whose spread is encouraged by the escalating fragmentation of land ownership and
globalization of trade,” writes Ann Hairston-Strang, Forest Hydrologist with
DNR’s Forest Service. Read more in the Winter 2007 issue of The Natural
Resource. |
Skiing comes to the “Maryland Alps” in 1940
Newspaper reporters in the 1940’s and 1950’s called this area “The Maryland
Alps,” the place where winter was king - “Maryland’s first genuine winter sports
area.” Can you identify this place? Here are a few more clues: “The first ski
event south of the Mason and Dixon Line”, occurred here in 1941. In the 1950’s,
this locale was called Maryland’s skiing mecca.” Give up? These accolades refer
to present day New Germany State Park and Savage River State Forest, where in
1940, recreational skiing was as new and fresh as the first snowfall of that
winter. |
Money doesn't grow on trees, or does it?
“Chesapeake forests provide enormous economic and ecological benefits. And
yet we continue to lose them at an astonishing rate. How can we stop the losses
and begin actually reforesting parts of the watershed? The emerging
answer—accounting for the full economic value of forests and using market
mechanisms to protect them—is central to a new initiative called
Forestry for the Bay Program. This collaborative approach for sustainable forestry combines the vast
partnership network of the Bay Program with the technical expertise of public
and private foresters and the coordinating efforts of the nonprofit Alliance for
the Chesapeake Bay.” Author Rebecca Hanmer, Director of the EPA’s Chesapeake Bay
Program Office, discusses the new breed of economists that have teamed up with
ecologists to start putting dollar figures on the “ecological services” provided
by Maryland’s forests. |
Centennial Note: Private Forest Landowners – Evolutions in Management
“If Grandfather Besley were here today he would be astonished. In the
early part of the century he was concerned with the twin threats of
over-harvesting and destructive fires. Today’s urban and suburban sprawl
destroys forests in a far more decisive and permanent manner. The actions he
took to control forest fires and to improve management practices seem simple by
comparison to what today’s forest managers and private owners must grapple
with.” Kirk P. Rodgers, using the Besley and Rodgers family business as an
example, looks at the role of private forest landowners who collectively own 78
% of Maryland’s forests and must ultimately be credited with the bulk of change
and progress made during the last century as well as meet the challenges facing
the future of Maryland’s forest resource. |
Fred W. Besley: Forestry Pioneer - Part
3 of a 3-part series
On February 16, 1942, when Fred W. Besley retired with 36 years of State Service
(1906-1942), he held the national record for the longest continuous service of a
State Forester, a record which still stands today. He had served under seven
administrations of Governors both Democrats and Republicans. DNR’s Forest
Service continues to carry forward the legacy of early foresters like Fred
Besley. With the overall healthy appearance of the forest on public lands today,
it is hard to imagine that most of the land was once cutover and abandoned. -
Part 3 of a 3-part series |
Part 2: Fred W. Besley - Forestry
Pioneer
State Forester
Fred W. Besley set a very high standard for those who followed after him,
raising the bar high, pioneering and establishing many scientific forestry
practices in Maryland. The 1906 Forestry Conservation Act quickly put Maryland
in the forefront of the national forestry conservation movement at the State
level. Besley’s arrival that same year as Maryland’s first State Forester marked
the beginning of a new forestry conservation era called the “Custodial” period.
During this time (1906-1942), management placed its emphasis on protecting,
nurturing, and restoring the forest back to health. Foresters surveyed and
mapped the forests for the first time, established tree nurseries and acquired
land for public use. The custodial period coincided with the entire span of Fred
W. Besley’s career as State Forester. |
Part 1:
Fred W. Besley - Forestry
Pioneer
Can
you imagine Maryland without a state forest or state park? Well, a little less
than one hundred years ago, in 1905, there was such a time. That all changed in
1906, when two brothers, John and Robert Garrett, made a generous donation of
1,917 acres of forest land in Garrett County to the State of Maryland. This
tract of land is known today as Garrett State Forest, Maryland’s first state
forest. This donation, along with the passing of the 1906 Forestry Conservation
Act, and the hiring of Fred W. Besley to be Maryland's first State Forester,
marks the beginning of the forestry conservation movement in Maryland.
In his role as a State Forester, Besley set a very
high standard for those who followed after him, raising the bar high, pioneering
and establishing many scientific forestry practices in Maryland. He was a
trailblazing, forestry pioneer. |
A 100-Year Comparison of Maryland’s Forest Products Industry
A full century of forestry in Maryland. By some measures, this is a long time --
by some other measures, it’s hardly a wink in time. Since folks involved with
forest management are accustomed to thinking in terms of a forest life-cycle,
the thought of a hundred-year period can pass through the mind’s eye with little
notice…until you stop and think about what has occurred in these particular past
hundred years: we have moved from horses to automobiles; cell phones replace the
telegraph; schoolchildren use laptops and satellite links instead of
chalkboards; people have left footprints in moon dust; and today horses are pets
and oxen are curiosities. Thinking of these changes makes you wonder about what
advancements have occurred in Maryland’s forest industry. |
Part 5: Scientific Forestry and Urban Progressivism:

The Development of the Maryland Board of Forestry, 1906 to 1921
Because it took on the role of managing an important suburban park, the Forestry Board’s role in the life of the City, the State and the people of Maryland provided it with a foundation to become a lasting State institution. The Board of Forestry in the 1920s solidified the Patapsco Valley’s connection with city
park system by purchasing most of the private property east to the city line. Within a few years, automobilists from Baltimore City were driving down stretches of windy tree-lined roads to the park. Read more… |
Part 4: Scientific Forestry and Urban Progressivism:
The Development of the Maryland Board of Forestry, 1906 to 1921 – Part 4
The Patapsco Forest Reserve’s recreational amenities provided middle-class
suburbanites with an opportunity to blend rugged outdoor living with
intellectual contemplation—or, at the very least, a chance for greater aesthetic
appreciation. Campsites, in particular, were a blend of the primitive and the
modern. In some cases, the influence of Baltimore’s elite progressivism was
obvious—such as Victor Bloede’s philanthropic efforts and the Hutzler campsites,
but in other cases the elite influence was more subtle—such as in the
experiences of many other summer campers and visitors to the park. Either way,
the new park provided the Forestry Board with a place to illustrate the benefits
of scientific forestry to people who, for the most part, did not own large
tracts of land, while simultaneously providing the white middle class with a
chance to, as Besley put it, “rough it pleasantly.” |
Part 3: Scientific Forestry and Urban Progressivism:
The Development of the Maryland
Board of Forestry, 1906 to 1921 – Part 3
On May 22, 1911, the editor of the
Baltimore Morning Sun wrote, “Baltimore is threatened again with a short water
supply, due in part, at least, to the decreasing flow of the streams which feed
our reservoirs.” Noting the importance of tree cover, the Sun bemoaned,
“Everybody knows it [that tree cover is important], and yet the portable sawmill
is going from woodland to woodland doing its work of destruction.” Whatever
reservations Besley may have harbored about immersing his Forestry Board into
the complexities of Maryland politics, by 1912 he clearly had no choice. Besley
had to widen the Forestry Board’s appeal, or risk being appropriated into
ineffectual obscurity.
|
Part 2: Scientific Forestry and Urban Progressivism:
The Development of the Maryland Board of Forestry, 1906 to 1921
The Forestry Board’s decision to hire Frederick Wilson Besley in 1906 was perhaps as significant as the
creation of the Forestry Board itself. Besley would serve as Maryland State
Forester for 36 years—providing the Board (and later the Department) of Forestry
with a stabilizing force. Hired to protect and manage existing forest reserves
and to spread the gospel of scientific management, Besley soon found himself
confronted with a limited operating budget, a small support staff dominated by
volunteers, and an apathetic legislature. He was entirely dependent upon his
ability to educate the general public about the benefits of scientific
forestry. This Centennial Note is the 2nd in a 5-part series. |
Part 1: Scientific Forestry and Urban Progressivism:
The Development of the Maryland Board of Forestry, 1906 to 1921
A Saturday morning canoe trip on April 16, 1921 led by State Forester Fred
W. Besley and Robert Garrett, a partner in a leading banking firm and member of
the Baltimore Municipal Arts Society, garnered headlines in both the Baltimore
Morning and Evening Sun: “Plan [for] Automobile Drive through Beauty Spot,” and
the “Plan to Preserve Banks of Patapsco.” Historian Robert F. Bailey explains,
“My purpose here is to articulate the interdependent relationship that developed
between the Maryland Board of Forestry and the Baltimore City urban elite…this
interaction proved to be a critical turning point in the development of a State
institution.” This Centennial Note is the first in a 5-part series. |
Hunters’ Valuable Contributions to Forest Conservation,
Wildlife Restoration and Public Land Acquisition
Aldo Leopold,
Teddy Roosevelt and Gifford Pinchot are names that most people recognize as
great leaders of the North American conservation movement. What many do not
realize is that these men were also hunters. They understood that certain
activities such as unregulated hunting, large scale land clearing, wildfires,
and soil erosion were having dramatic impacts on wildlife, their habitats, and
on forest health. They, along with others, saw the need for stricter laws and
regulations, the need for government to manage and protect the wildlife and the
land, and the need for sustainable funding to carry out this mission. |
Plaque Dedicated for Maryland’s First State Park
In 1907, Catonsville’s John Glenn planted the seeds for Patapsco Valley State
Park, Maryland’s First State Park, by donating 43 acres of his Hilton Estate to
the Maryland State Board of Forestry. State Forester F.W. Besley promoted the
Patapsco Forest Reserve as a recreational park in 1910 – a pioneering concept.
The “park” attracted picnickers and campers from Baltimore City and surrounding
communities. By 1916, about 75 campsites were open, accommodating hundreds of
campers and thousands of visitors. Patapsco’s establishment laid the foundation
for today’s Maryland State Park System. A DNR Centennial Plaque was dedicated
to recognize Patapsco Valley State Park as Maryland’s first state park on May
23, 2006. |
MPT’s Outdoors Maryland Premiere
The Best Days of Our Lives – Nov. 14th at 7:00 pm
MPT’s Outdoors Maryland, in cooperation with Maryland DNR, premieres a
half-hour Outdoors Maryland special that celebrates the development of
State Forests and Parks in Maryland from 1906 to the 2006, the centennial of
their founding. Presented in three parts, the saga unfolds in major eras,
colorful characters, and pivotal events. Through candid interviews with
descendants of historic figures, with foresters who have blazed new paths, and
with master storytellers steeped in living history and legend, The Best Days
of Our Lives: The Centennial of Maryland State Forest and Parks,
illuminates the progress of the last hundred years. |
State Forest Tree Nursery Plaque Dedicated
Arbor Day 2006 marked the 100th anniversary of the signing of the 1906 Maryland
Forest Conservation Act. The law was so innovative that it quickly moved
Maryland to the forefront of the national forest conservation movement. We were
only the third state in the country to initiate a statewide forest conservation
program. Eight years later, the State Legislature passed the Roadside Tree Law.
One of the first of its kind, Maryland’s law would later serve as a model
imitated across the country. It authorized the state forestry department to
plant and protect trees along Maryland public right of ways. It also enabled the
state forestry division to establish a state tree nursery. |
Marylands Fire Warden & Fire Lookout Tower Remembrance Day
On Sunday, October 15, 2006 members of the State Forest and Parks Centennial Committee were joined by many of DNR State
Parks and Forest Service staff, including retired men and women who were once
part of Maryland's forest fire fighting team. Also on hand were three
generations of descendents of Maryland's first State Forester, Fred W. Besley.
The group gathered at the base of the Thayerville Forest Fire Lookout Tower
Trail in Deep Creek Lake State Park to dedicate a Centennial Plaque to Forest
Wardens and Fire Towers. When the State of Maryland established the office of
State Forester in 1906, one of the first priorities for the new forester, Fred
W. Besley, was finding the means to suppress forest fires that were devastating
Maryland's timber resources. |
Besley Family Demonstration Campsite
The Cradle of Outdoor Recreation in Maryland
Fred W. Besley, Maryland’s first State Forester, deserves great credit for
establishing both statewide forest conservation and a system of parks. On Oct.
10, 2006 members of the State Forest and Parks Centennial Committee were joined
by many of the volunteer Friends of Patapsco Valley State Park, DNR State Parks
and Forest Service staff, and interested citizens, including descendents of
Maryland's first State Forester, Fred W. Besley, to dedicate a Centennial Plaque
on the site of the Besley Demonstration Campsite, where outdoor recreation on
Maryland State Forests and Parks originated. Kirk P. Rogers shared family
memories of his grandfather from the podium. Another honored guest at the
ceremony was Helen Besley Overton, the daughter of Maryland’s first state
forester, Fred W. Besley. |
Maryland’s Forestry Boards
Today’s all-volunteer Forestry Boards are made up of individuals who are
interested in sustainable forestry and have a desire to see that resources are
used wisely and renewed. Board members work closely with foresters throughout
the State to conserve and improve Maryland’s forest resource and promote forest
management through education and advocacy, tree planting projects and other
programs. They work to improve the forest environment in urban and suburban as
well as rural areas and to educate people about the benefits of forests and
trees. For over 20 years they have worked hand-in-hand with the DNR’s Forest
Service to conduct a week-long summer program for high school students on
forestry as a career. |
Susquehanna State Park Connects Us to History
The history of the Susquehanna River Valley demonstrates the reliance that
pioneer settlers placed on waterways for both power and transportation. That
story is told at Susquehanna State Park. Captain John Smith first explored the
Susquehanna River in 1608. It impressed him favorably. He noted that "heaven and
earth seemed never to have agreed better to frame a place for man's commodious
and delightful habitation." More recently, Susquehanna State Park has acquired
an historical landmark along the Chesapeake National Water Trail, thanks to
Exelon Corporations’ generous donation of Roberts Island to the State of
Maryland. |
The Civilian Conservation Corps - Part III
CCC Plaque Dedication & Personal Perspectives
The Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) was a key to the greatest national
forest and park development effort in American history. Organized by President
Franklin D. Roosevelt during the Great Depression, the CCC employed over three
million young men between the ages of 18 and 25 across the nation. Under
Maryland State Forester Fred W. Besley's direction, a "tree army" of 35, 800 men
built and improved State Forests and Parks. The CCC conducted lasting
conservation work on both public and private lands by constructing roads,
buildings and pavilions; erecting fire towers; fighting forest fires, planting
millions of trees; and stabilizing soil erosion. We dedicate this plaque with
sincere gratitude to the men of the CCC". - Dedicated September 17, 2006,
Gambrill State Park. This article is the third of our three-part series about
the C.C.C. and their contribution to Maryland's State Forests and Parks. |
The Civilian Conservation Corps
- Part II
A Maryland Perspective
The Civilian Conservation Corps (C.C.C.) was a massive Federal works program during
the Great Depression. In Maryland, the C.C.C. put a total of 30,000 young men to
work reclaiming natural resources and building facilities for public
accommodation in the out of doors. The C.C.C. built lakes, cabins, pavilions,
trails, campgrounds and other visitor amenities all over the state, though
principally in Western Maryland. This article is the second of a three-part
series about the C.C.C. and their contribution to Maryland's State Forests and
Parks. Fred W. Besley, Maryland's State Forester (1906-1942) later indicated the
work of the C.C.C. set Maryland’s forests and parks ahead by 20 years. |
The Civilian Conservation Corps
- Part I
A National Perspective
The Civilian Conservation Corps (C.C.C.) was a massive Federal works program during
the Great Depression. In Maryland, the C.C.C. put a total of 30,000 young men to
work reclaiming natural resources and building facilities for public
accommodation in the out of doors. The C.C.C. built lakes, cabins, pavilions,
trails, campgrounds and other visitor amenities all over the state, though
principally in Western Maryland. This article begins a three-part series about
the C.C.C. and their contribution to Maryland's State Forests and Parks. Join
the MD Dept of Natural Resources and the Centennial Committee at Gambrill State
Park on Sunday, Sept. 17th at 2:00 pm as we honor the C.C.C. for
their contributions to Maryland's state forests and parks. Guest speakers
include former CCC members. |
History of the Maryland DNR Forest Service Wildfire Program
With a salary of $1500.00 a year, a budget of $2000.00, and a staff of three
assistant foresters and a secretary, Besley set out to undo centuries of poor
land practices and spread the message of the new science of forestry with an
almost religious fervor. Along with teaching Marylanders the value of practicing
sound forest management techniques, Besley knew that preventing forest fires was
an equally important conservation practice. Decades of poor logging practices
and indiscriminate burning of the forest left poor soils, erosion, and large
uncontrolled fires that threatened life, property, and the natural ecosystem.
One of Besley’s first tasks was to create a network of volunteer Forest Wardens
to educate and enforce Maryland’s new forest fire protection laws. |
Maryland’s Big Tree Champions
The roots of the Big Tree Champion contest are planted in Maryland, for it
all started in “the Old Line State.” Fred W. Besley, Maryland’s first State
Forester (1906-1942), is the father of the National Big Tree Champion Contest.
In his booklet, Big Tree Champions of Maryland: A Record of the Largest Trees
of the Principal Species, printed in 1956, Besley wrote that the forests of
Maryland were rich in different kinds of trees, “probably more than 250 native
tree species, and there was a universal interest in notable trees.” Because of
this, Besley was inspired to organize a Big Tree program. |
Train Spotting in Patapsco State Park
The Patapsco Valley, named for the river that runs through the heart of it,
has drawn people for all manner of activities since colonial times. The rugged,
remote valley, home of the Patapsco Valley State Park, is as much an attraction
to train buffs as it is to the park’s hikers and bikers. Little has changed in
the 175 years since the first rails were laid and the sight of trains slowly
winding their way through the valley is a timeless one. While the technology
used to convey the freight has progressed (massive steam locomotives were
replaced with diesels in the mid-1950s) the action is just as dramatic. Heavy
loaded trains bring coal to Baltimore from West Virginia, and freights hauling
hundreds of goods to market use the rails through the Valley daily.
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Father of Maryland Forestry Brought Tree Nursery Science to Maryland
Fred W. Besley (father of Maryland forestry) and a student of Gifford Pinchot (father of American forestry), brought forest tree nursery
science to Maryland as its first state forester. Besley gained his knowledge and
experience from working in 1904 as a superintendent at the U.S. Forest Service
Tree Nursery at Halsey, Nebraska, the first federal tree nursery established in
the country. Kirk Rodgers, Fred W. Besley’s grandson, said that one of the
earliest and most vigorous efforts his grandfather undertook as a state forester
was to establish a state tree nursery. “He was particularly interested in forest
regeneration. He was ashamed with the way Maryland’s roadsides looked. He made
this into a crusade." |
The Wye Oak Gallery
The Quiet Giant, An Online Art Exhibition
Thanks to the efforts of Fred. W. Besley, Maryland's first State Forester,
Maryland's Wye Oak was long recognized as the largest white oak tree in the
state and the nation. Its stately presence in the village of Wye Mills in Talbot
County had marked the passage of time for many generations. On June 6, 2002 the
mighty Wye Oak succumbed to time and the elements as its massive trunk collapsed
during a severe thunderstorm. It was estimated to be more than 450 years old at
the time of its fall. In 2004, The State of Maryland offered remnants of the Wye
Oak to Maryland artists interested in producing artwork with their varied talent
and creative expression. The Maryland Department of Natural Resources is pleased
to present the commemorative work of Maryland artists, whose imaginative
tributes to Maryland’s fallen Wye Oak Tree are truly impressive. Welcome to the
The Wye Oak Gallery. |
DNR and American Chestnut Foundation Sign Agreement
The first State Forester, Fred W. Besley, was witness to the loss of the
American chestnut to the chestnut blight (Cryphonectria parasitica), which was
first identified in the United States in 1902. At that time, the tree dominated
the Appalachian mountaintops from Maine to Georgia. A fast growing species with
straight-grained, rot-resistant wood, the American chestnut grew trunks as much
at 19 feet in diameter. In less than 30 years, these forest giants had virtually
disappeared, leaving acres of stands of dead wood. On Friday, May 26, 2006,
representatives of the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) and The American
Chestnut Foundation (TACF) planted an American chestnut seedling in a ceremony
at Green Ridge State Forest in Allegany County, marking the signing of an
historic agreement between the two organizations that will promote cooperation
in research and eventual restoration of the species in Maryland.
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Natural Riches and Historic Treasures in Charles County

Protecting 1.2 miles of relatively undisturbed shoreline along the tidal
Potomac River on the Nanjemoy peninsula is Nanjemoy NRMA, one of the most
ecologically and culturally significant landscapes remaining in Maryland. The
waterfront portion of the property is entirely within the state’s Critical Area
and provides refuge for migratory waterfowl and wading birds. It also contains
an extensive network of tidal and non-tidal wetlands and secluded bays that
protect bay grasses, which in turn clean the Bay and provide habitat for
numerous fish and invertebrate species. Find out how this valuable property,
which is prized also for its cultural and historical significance, came to be
protected.
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Forestry Education in America and Maryland

When Gifford Pinchot, the father of American forestry, entered Yale in 1885
and decided to make forestry his profession, he did not have a single American
role model. There was no profession of forestry in this country. “I had no more
conception of what it meant to be a forester than the man in the moon,” he
wrote. “But at least a forester worked in the woods and with the woods - and I
loved the woods and everything about them.” Today, more than a century later,
the profession has expanded in ways even Pinchot could not have imagined, but
its practitioners are still bonded by the same love of the forest. |
The Grandson of Maryland’s First State Forester Remembers…
”The Wye Oak was a spectacular giant and there can
be little question that my grandfather, Fred W. Besley, Maryland’s first State
Forester was inspired by it and that it added to his determination to establish
the Big Tree Champion Program here in Maryland. When he first saw the tree in
1909 he had already noted the impressive number of big trees here in Maryland
and was beginning to collect information about them… As time passed he began to
be more and more systematic in making measurements and taking photographs of big
trees. He worked almost alone for 15 years in documenting them.” – Kirk Rodgers |
Treasures of the West
Garrett County is home to two vastly different and quite unique state parks with one
common thread: their shared history. Both Swallow Falls and Herrington Manor
state parks exist today because of the foresight of several key individuals.
From the Garrett Brothers, who donated the tract of land between the two parks
and Swallow Falls, to the philanthropist Henry Krug who loved the area so much
he refused to let the woods around the falls be harvested for lumber, to the
dedicated members of Civilian Conservation Corps, their efforts have made the
parks the recreational destinations that they are today. |
North Point State Park Visitors Center
There is no doubt that North Point State Park is one of Maryland's most
unique and important natural areas. Though it sits in the shadow of Baltimore,
just a few miles outside the city's Beltway, this 1,320 acre waterfront park
includes more than six miles of shoreline along the Chesapeake Bay, Back River,
and Shallow Creek. Here a large bayside marsh, Black Marsh, that is considered
to be one of the finest examples of a tidal marsh on the Upper Chesapeake.
Visitors can hike on miles of trails through the marsh and can explore the
remains of a turn of the century amusement park. North Point is rich in natural
beauty. Come see how Mother Nature reclaimed the land where the amusement park
once stood. Today visitors to southeastern Baltimore County can take advantage
of the Visitor Center at North Point State Park, one of the DNRs premier attractions. |
Wye Oak: The Life of a Tree

On June 6, 2006 at the planting of the Wye Oak Clone and Wye Oak Artist Exhibition in Wye Oak
State Park, artist Lawrence Romorini unveiled his latest piece of art, “The Life
Of A Tree,” commemorating the extraordinary and beloved Wye Oak, which was
felled by lightening in 2002, after approximately 450 years on the Eastern Shore
in Maryland. The art, which is 72” x 38” x 9.5” features an actual branch from
the Wye Oak, mounted on a scroll with an artistic rendition of the tree and its
radius. These 450 concentric rings offer an appreciation for both the remarkable
size and longevity of this mighty oak. Starting with the acorn on the upper
left, miniaturized photographs, memorabilia and three-dimensional symbols serve
as some reminders of the long history that transpired for the nation and
Maryland during the 450+ years that the Wye Oak lived on the Eastern Shore. |
Maryland's First Forestry Law

As a direct result of the Garrett's generous and farsighted gift, the legislature
passed Maryland's first forestry law. It dealt mainly with the control of the
forest fires which made the practice of forestry financially impractical.
Specifically the law called for the establishment of a State Board of Forestry,
the appointment of a State Forester and the organization of a corps of local
fire wardens. The law also provided for education of woodlot owners about better
management and harvesting methods. The Forestry Board's total operating budget
in 1906 was $2,500. |
The Nature Center at Martinek State Park
Just east of the town of Denton in rural Caroline County, Martinak State Park
sits quietly nestled along the banks of the Choptank River. Martinak was one of
the first Maryland state parks to be designated a Chesapeake Bay Gateways
Network site, and is part of a system of over 120 parks, wildlife refuges,
museums, historic communities and trails around the Bay watershed through which
one can experience and learn about the Chesapeake. The Nature Center’s
interpretive displays are interesting and informative. A striking mural painted
by local artist Kurt Plinke features commonly found flora and fauna, including a
nearly life-sized great blue heron and bald eagle. Other displays highlight the
Delmarva Peninsula’s Native Indian population, including a collection of
artifacts found in the area by retired park ranger Joe Reinhardt. The main
feature of the Nature Center is an 800-gallon aquarium containing a variety of
species from the Choptank River and nearby Watt’s Creek. |
Tucked Away on the Tuckahoe

Along Tuckahoe State Park’s extensive trail system, imaginative visitors
can re-create the park’s history. Former farmsteads, long abandoned and
overgrown, are marked in spring by gardens of jonquils. Trees flower next to the
skeletal remains of old foundations. Occasionally, sections of fencing, rusted
farm equipment and other long-forgotten “trash” appear along the trails, to be
discovered by curious hikers. The stream valley has also been noted as a route
along the Underground Railroad for runaway slaves heading north toward freedom.
Even the park’s administrative office is a piece of history. A farmhouse typical
of those built at the turn of the 20th century, it was purchased along with the
surrounding farmland when the park was being created and has been carefully
restored by park staff. |
Fort Frederick's 250th Anniversary Celebration
Celebrate the 250th anniversary of the construction of Fort Frederick in Washington County this
weekend! Anniversary activities include breaking ground for the
soon-to-be-constructed Officers Quarters, historic reenactments and encampments,
interpretive programs, period entertainers, performances by historical bands,
including General Pershing’s Own Army Band and the nationally-famous Civil War
Wildcat Regimental Band, and fireworks! Hours are 6 - 9 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. -
10 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Sunday. For additional information about Fort Frederick State Park, a
designated state park since the 1920s, its history and scheduled events, visit
online or call 301-842-2155. |
The Grist Mill Trail in Patapsco Valley State Park
Patapsco Valley State Park, which dates back to 1907 and is one of Maryland's
oldest state parks, lies in a steep river valley and extends along 32 miles of
the Patapsco River. The river valley and its natural resources have long been
enjoyed by the Native Americans, explorers and settlers as well as present-day
citizens, and the park is nationally recognized today for its trail
opportunities and scenery. The Grist Mill Trail is a moderate route and
popular destination for parents with children in strollers, families on biking
trips and people with disabilities. The Grist Mill Trail parallels the river for
a mile and a half and provides a close-up view of its scenic beauty, while
leading past numerous sites of historic interest. |
Point Lookout in Green Ridge State Forest
Point Lookout in Green Ridge State Forest really is one of “Maryland’s
best-kept secrets.” Not to be confused with the southern Maryland state park of
the same name, visitors to Point Lookout have a spectacular view of the ancient
Potomac River valley. DNR established the area around Point Lookout as wildlands,
thus protecting the view on the Maryland side. Visitors to Point Lookout today
can enjoy the same view that the Union troops had 140 years ago when they used
Point lookout to observe Confederate movements through the valley. Also from
this historic overlook, one can survey 243 acres of land once owned by George
Washington, first President of the United States. |
Gifford Pinchot, Father of American Forestry
It was Gifford Pinchot, the nation's first practicing forester and for 12 years chief of
what became the U.S. Forest Service, who influenced Fred W. Besley, Maryland's first state
forester, to become an outstanding environmental leader. Though not well-known today, it was Pinchot who convinced
President Teddy Roosevelt to launch the conservation movement in America. Most of our national
forests exist largely because of his persistence. Besley, who worked for Pinchot
as a student assistant, became Maryland's first state forester in 1906, and went
on to establish our state's system of forests and parks, mirroring in part
Pinchot's work for the nation.
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Southern Exposure: The Great Cypress Swamp at Pocomoke River State Park
Have you ever imagined what it’s like to paddle through a bald cypress swamp? Uncover
the secrets of the Great Cypress Swamp with a trip to Pocomoke River State Park
in Worcester County to. Travel just 20 minutes outside of Salisbury and three
miles south of Snow Hill, and you will stumble upon Shad Landing where you can
begin your journey to learn more about the history and inhabitants of this
often-misunderstood ecosystem, the northernmost bald cypress swamp in the United
States. |
The Peculiar Ponies of Assateague State Park
Named consistently as one of Maryland’s most visited recreational areas, Assateague State Park averages well over one million guests annually. This barrier island park, located on the Atlantic Ocean, is known nationally for the wild horses that freely roam its 850 acres of beach, sand dune, salt marsh and maritime forest. The wild horses, popularized
by Marguerite Henry’s children’s book “Misty of Chincoteague,” have occupied the island for approximately 350 years. Several colorful stories provide possible explanations to their origins. |
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