DNR Dedicates Fred W. Besley Demonstration Forest
Besley was Maryland’s first State Forester
Linkwood, Md. (April 23, 2012) – To honor Maryland’s first State
forester, the Maryland Department of Natural Resources (DNR) officially
dedicated the Fred W. Besley Demonstration Forest in Dorchester County on April
20. The ceremony, held in Linkwood, recognized Besley for his influence on the
future of forestry conservation.
“As Maryland’s first State Forester, Fred Besley built a legacy of conservation
and sustainable forestry management, which the Maryland Forest Service still
follows to this day,” said State Forester and Director Steven Koehn.
Earlier this year, the Maryland Board of Public Works
officially renamed 1,040
acres of Chesapeake Forest Land in Dorchester County to the Fred W. Besley
Demonstration Forest to honor the father of Maryland forestry. The newly
dedicated area consists of five parcels of land originally owned and worked by
Besley. In 2010, the State purchased the area from Besley & Rodgers, Inc.,
through Program Open Space. These tracts now serve as living examples of
Maryland’s first conservation efforts lead by Besley himself.
Besley became Maryland’s first State Forester in 1906, after being hand-picked
for the position by Gifford Pinchot, the first Chief of the U.S. Forest Service.
Maryland was only the third state to create such as position, and its forestry
program soon became a national model.
Changes caused by more than 250 years of settlement, agricultural expansion and
industrialization had left Maryland’s forests in deplorable condition at the
time of Besley’s appointment. He worked tirelessly for nearly four decades to
stem the tide of destruction by educating the public, especially private woodlot
owners, on the merits of forestry and conservation.
Besley’s greatest legacy is perhaps the system of multi-purpose forest reserves
he left behind. During his tenure, Maryland’s public lands grew from 2,000 acres
in 1906 to more than 100,000 acres in 1942, forming the backbone of today’s
network of parks, forests and other natural areas.
“When Fred Besley stepped down as Maryland State Forester in 1942, he set about
practicing what he preached, purchasing forestland and managing it in accordance
with the techniques he had encouraged so many others to adopt,” said Kirk
Rodgers, a grandson of Fred W. Besley and president of Besley & Rodgers Inc.
“The forest area that we dedicate today… symbolizes those efforts.”
An information kiosk on the life of Fred Besley and the Besley & Rodgers family
corporation can be viewed at the entrance to the forest off of Andrews Road in
southern Dorchester County. More information on this and other forest lands is
available at 410-632-3732 or dnr.maryland.gov/forests.
Governor Martin O’Malley has made reforestation a priority of his
administration, demonstrating extraordinary leadership to engage private
citizens, local governments, organizations, inmates and regional partners in
tree planting efforts. He was recently honored with the
National Arbor Day
Foundation’s first ever Vision Award, recognizing him for his leadership in
increasing the State’s tree canopy, obtaining dual “green” certification of the
State’s forests, development of greenhouse gas reduction strategies,
participation in the Baltimore-Washington Partners for Forest Stewardship and
establishment of the Sustainable Forestry Act and no net loss of forest policy
goals.
Under Governor O’Malley’s Marylanders Plant Trees program, citizens have planted
more than 75,000 trees in 3 years, and Maryland inmates have planted more than
one million trees on public lands. All Maryland State forests have also received
dual certification, recognizing the State’s commitment to sustainable forestry
practices and the green jobs the forest industry supports.
| April 23, 20122 |
Contact: Josh Davidsburg |
The Maryland Department of Natural Resources is the state agency responsible for providing natural and living resource-related services to citizens and visitors. DNR manages nearly one-half million acres of public lands and 17,000 miles of waterways, along with Maryland's forests, fisheries and wildlife for maximum environmental, economic and quality of life benefits. A national leader in land conservation, DNR-managed parks and natural, historic and cultural resources attract 11 million visitors annually. DNR is the lead agency in Maryland's effort to restore the Chesapeake Bay, the state's number one environmental priority. DNR is the lead agency in Maryland's effort to restore the Chesapeake Bay, the state's number one environmental priority. Learn more at www.dnr.maryland.gov
