VI. Steps Leading Toward
Establishment of Crater Lake National Park
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F. Emergence of a National Conservation
Philosophy
By 1864 three scientific thinkers--Henry
David Thoreau, the Massachusetts naturalist-poet-philosopher; George
Perkins Marsh, a Vermont lawyer and scholar; and Frederick Law Olmsted,
a Connecticut man who was superintendent of the Central Park project in
New York City--had intelligently and cogently advocated the need for
conservation and the preservation of natural resources. Their writings
were the foundation upon which all subsequent conservation proponents
built their arguments. Olmsted, in particular, was interested in the
concept of great "public parks" and was responsible for launching a
movement to combat the ongoing commercial exploitation of Yosemite
Valley, whose giant sequoias were being senselessly cut. As a result of
strong pressure exerted on Congress by a handful of men to preserve the
valley and at least one grove of trees (both of which were on federal
property), the federal government passed a law in 1864 signed by
President Abraham Lincoln that granted Yosemite Valley and the Mariposa
Grove of Big Trees to the state of California. This was the first time
that any government had set aside public lands purely for the
preservation of scenic values--a true landmark in conservation history
even though it had resulted in creation of a state park rather than a
truly "national" one.
[10]
The "public park" idea involving
preservation of important natural features and their management for the
benefit of the people circulated widely throughout the East and Midwest
between 1864 and 1879. In 1870 the Washburn-Langford-Doane exploring
expedition to Yellowstone returned, its members awestruck by the
geysers, hot springs, and other thermal features of the area. They had
been so impressed, in fact, that it had been tacitly decided among the
group that there should be no private ownership of any part of the
region, but that instead it should be set aside as a national park.
Another expedition to the same place in 1871, led by United States
Geologist Ferdinand V. Hayden, accompanied by a group of scientists,
photographer William H. Jackson, and the two artists Thomas Moran and
Henry Elliott, surveyed the area and later published detailed geological
and descriptive reports in the form of a government document. It and
earlier published reports on the wonders of Yellowstone were accorded
considerable publicity in the daily newspapers and in magazines, and an
enthusiastic public also suggested that Yellowstone should be kept in
the public domain. As President Ulysses S. Grant signed the Yellowstone
Park bill into law on March 1, 1872, its importance derived from the
fact that this still unfamiliar concept of a public park had now been
introduced on the national level; because Yellowstone was located in the
Territory of Wyoming, the park was under the immediate administration of
the federal government, not of a state. A precedent had now been set for
areas to be "reserved and withdrawn from settlement . . . and dedicated
and set apart as a public park or pleasuring-ground for the benefit and
enjoyment of the people." The Yellowstone Park Act also empowered the
secretary of the interior to provide for the "preservation from injury
or spoliation, of all timber, mineral deposits, natural curiosities, or
wonders within said park, and their retention in their natural
condition." He was also directed to protect fish and game from wanton
destruction.
[11]
Meanwhile, wholesale devastation of timber
reserves continued. In 1876 the position of forestry agent in the United
States Department of Agriculture was established to investigate timber
consumption and problems involved in trying to preserve forested lands.
Other federal employees were also working to awaken public interest in
the natural resources of the West. Important at this time was the work
of Hayden's Geological and Geographical Surveys of the Territories of
the United States and John Wesley Powell's United States Geographical
and Geological Survey of the Rocky Mountain Region, plus that of Lt.
George Wheeler's Geographical Surveys West of the One Hundredth
Meridian. These three survey units not only set high standards for
scientific work, but also contributed toward the appreciation by the
general public of the diversified character of the Far West. These three
groups were ultimately incorporated in 1879 into a single organization
known as the United States Geological Survey, under the Department of
the Interior, which was authorized to conduct all surveys of a
scientific character performed by the federal government. A further
milestone in this year was reached when Congress gave the president
power to reserve forests from sale, an authority Grover Cleveland later
exercised to greatly benefit Crater Lake. Because there was no provision
for managing or protecting these reserves, however, fire and theft
continued to take their toll.
[12]