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by Vaughn Deckret In 2006, the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) will commemorate the 100th anniversaries of the Maryland Forest Service and the State Forest and Park Service. Fred W. Besley, Maryland's first state forester, laid the foundations of these DNR divisions. How Besley became an outstanding environmental leader has much to do with the man who inspired him-Gifford Pinchot. Gifford Pinchot was an extraordinary man. Born to wealth and a family of culture and connections, he chose to forgo the path of business, so successfully followed by his father and grandfathers, to blaze new trails. On graduating from Yale in 1889, he could have pursued any profession on earth, yet Gifford Pinchot decided to become a forester.
For bringing the profession to America and promoting the new field relentlessly throughout his life, he is recognized as the father of American forestry. Pioneering forestry, though, proved to be the prelude to even greater deeds: formulating the idea of conservation as we now understand the term and launching the conservation movement.
Spirit of the Times At the end of the 1800s, settlers out West were still piling and burning saw logs just to get rid of them. The eastern hemlock was approaching extinction as the trees were being methodically stripped of their bark, a prized source of tannin for the leather-making industry. Trees, much like the oysters in our Chesapeake Bay, were seen as inexhaustible. To displace destructive use of forests with wise use that guarantees sustainable supply was not simply a formidable task: It was an idea alien to nearly everyone. In this time of wanton devastation, accelerated by advances in machinery and transportation, Gifford Pinchot came of age.
Early
Influences George Marsh's "Man and Nature," a gift from his parents on his 21st birthday, profoundly influenced young Pinchot. The book attributes the collapse of various ancient Mediterranean settlements and civilizations to deforestation of watersheds. The ensuing erosion of fertile soil and silting of waterways and harbors eventually destroyed their economies and social orders. Thereafter, Pinchot never doubted the direct relation of forests to a society's welfare. Preparing for his Life's Work In Europe, he acquired a grounding in silviculture (knowledge of the care and cultivation of trees), the economics of forestry, and forestry law. There he formed a concrete understanding of the forest as a crop. On returning home in December 1890, Pinchot wasted no time pursuing his priorities: establishing relations with leaders of the nascent forestry movement, practicing forestry, and seeing America's great forests.
Crucial Experience As the fledgling forester wrote, this trip gave him a chance to "shake hands with the U.S.A." Conducting his own "grand tour," he saw the Grand Canyon, Yosemite, the giant sequoias of the Sierras, and the towering redwoods and Douglas firs of the Pacific coastal forests. The vastness and magnificence of the largely unspoiled West left him in awe and heightened his sense of what was at stake. A flood of practical experience followed. He was hired to manage forests on George Vanderbilt's mammoth estate in North Carolina. In late 1893, he took on additional work as a consulting forester, applying the science of forestry in such places as the Adirondacks of New York and the pine and white cedar woods of New Jersey. Of crucial importance was his appointment to the National Forest Commission, formed to write a plan for administering all forests on U.S. public lands. In addition to the experience evaluating western forests that were to become 21 million additional acres of national reserves, Pinchot got an education in the realities of politics, legislation, bureaucracy, regional interests and the power of public opinion. Another result was that two presidents, Grover Cleveland and William McKinley, and numerous senators, congressmen and high-level bureaucrats became well acquainted with the energetic and able Gifford Pinchot.
Forest of Accomplishments
Pinchot knew that to advance forestry in giant steps required a highly capable organization, so he built one. He steadily enlarged his staff (e.g., from 11 to 179 in three years) and included respected professors to provide scientific expertise. He rejected the political spoils system and hired only on merit. He also demanded professionalism in all matters. For example, all inquiries from the public and Congress had to be answered fully and quickly, and correspondence had to be replied to within 36 hours. His staff became renowned for its esprit de corps, and his agency was widely seen as the best run in the federal government. In the words of Stewart Udall, Secretary of the Interior in the early 1960s, Pinchot made the U.S. Forest Service "in his time the most exciting organization in Washington." Throughout his years in Washington, Pinchot energetically cultivated political and public support for his agency's work and its mission, and he used the press as his primary means. To pursue favorable publicity, he set up an in-house press bureau. He even used a new mailing label machine to send reports and press releases to thousands of selected individuals, groups and newspapers. The broad support he generated coupled with President Theodore Roosevelt's vigorous backing gave Pinchot one of his greatest successes. In 1905, Congress agreed to transfer all national forest reserves, soon renamed national forests, from the Department of the Interior to his agency in Agriculture. This transfer allowed him to practice forestry on millions of federal acres and put an end to decades of forest devastation. During his tenure, Pinchot increased the number of national forests from 32 to 149 and their acreage to 193 million. Today these public lands continue to serve multiple purposes, including watershed protection, habitat and wilderness preservation, outdoor recreation, and timber production.
Birth of Conservation In the early 1900s, more than 20 federal agencies dealt with natural resources. Though their responsibilities often overlapped, each agency pursued its own objectives, and little cooperation occurred among them. Because President Teddy Roosevelt routinely conducted much of his business with these agencies through Pinchot, who was his friend and advisor, the chief forester became familiar with mining, agriculture, irrigation, stream flow, soil erosion, fish, game and other resource matters like no one else in Washington. On a February day in 1907, Pinchot went for a solitary ride on horseback to get away from work, but he found himself thinking about the spectrum of natural resources-water, soil, wildlife, plants, trees and minerals-on which our lives depend. Considering the interlocking relations among them and that all were parts of a whole, it dawned on him that what bound all resources together was the problem of use.
As a forester, he knew that wise use was the answer to devastation. In a leap of
imagination, he saw that an extrapolation of the idea to all resources was the
Pinchot derived the name for his idea from "conservancy," the term for a large tract of forest land managed by a "conservator" in British India. Conservation-the management, restoration, protection and preservation of natural resources-was his prescription for finding a balance between human activity and the workings of nature. When Pinchot brought his "big picture" idea to the president, Roosevelt immediately grasped its importance. Then and there, he made it the policy of his administration, and conservation soon became a household word.
Enduring Legacy Fred Besley was among them. Besley worked for Pinchot as a student assistant, graduated from the Yale School of Forestry, was appointed 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. Steve Koehn, who directs DNR's Forest Service and so holds Besley's job today, is himself a disciple of Pinchot. Of
course, the overarching element of his legacy is conservation itself, the core
idea guiding natural resource agencies throughout the country. In Maryland, DNR
is working diligently to replenish bay grasses, restore the oyster population,
reduce nutrient runoff, and protect the Chesapeake Bay watershed. There may be
no finer way of honoring our first conservationist than putting his idea into
practice.
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