Crater Lake National Park News
Crater Lake Institute - www.craterlakeinstitute.com
How Rogue forest began
Mail Tribune
January 30, 2005
By PAUL FATTIG
The deeper roots of what is now the Rogue River-Siskiyou
National Forest go back to 1893.
The seed was planted by President Grover Cleveland when he
created the Cascade Forest Reserve, including land that would
become the Prospect and Butte Falls districts as well as the
east side of the Ashland Ranger District, according to Jeff
LaLande, historian and archaeologist with the forest.
Cleveland also established the Ashland Forest Reserve in 1893,
including all federal lands in the Ashland Creek watershed, he
said.
But it would take years of nurturing and adjustments before the
present forest emerged in its current shape, he said.
"Like today, there were consolidations and all kinds of processes going on to make it more efficient to manage," he said.
"Of course, this was taking shape all over the national forest
system," he added. "There were a whole bunch of national forests
that were proclaimed that disappeared or were consolidated."
In southwestern Oregon, several forest reserves and national
forests came and went as Uncle Sam fine-tuned management areas,
he said.
"There was a lot of consolidating, a lot of gerrymandering," he
said of the early years.
LaLande and fellow agency archaeologist Janet Joyer have
researched the history of both the Rogue River and Siskiyou
national forests, whose administrative staffs were consolidated
last year.
President Theodore Roosevelt followed Cleveland’s pioneering
footsteps by establishing the U.S. Forest Service in 1905, as
well as the 1.1 million-acre Siskiyou Forest Reserve.
In 1906, Roosevelt expanded the Ashland Forest Reserve to
include what is now the Applegate Ranger District.
The following year, when Congress changed the term "forest
reserve" to "national forest," the southernmost portion of the
Cascade Forest Reserve became Cascade National Forest-South.
The Siskiyou became a national forest in 1907. Also that year,
Roosevelt created the Ashland National Forest, which is now the
Ashland Ranger District.
The Cascade National Forest-South was renamed the Mazama
National Forest early in 1908, becoming the Crater National
Forest in July of that year.
The Ashland forest was absorbed into the Crater forest.
"By 1908, what would become the Rogue River National Forest had
really taken official shape," LaLande said.
However, it wasn’t until 1932 that the Crater forest became the
Rogue River National Forest, he said, noting that people were
confusing the forest name with Crater Lake National Park.
When the U.S. Bureau of Land Management was created after World
War II, large sections of the lower elevation lands on the Rogue
River forest were transferred to the BLM, LaLande said.
In 1999, the Forest Service placed the Rogue River and Siskiyou
forests under one forest supervisor. The agency administratively
combined the Rogue River and Siskiyou forests in 2004. Although
only Congress has the authority to physically create one forest
out of the two, the agency chief has the authority to combine
forest administrations.