In
the early nineteenth century one of the areas of the West that
received
much notice was the mysterious area lying at the headwaters of the
Yellowstone River. After several years of incredible stories about
a land where the earth shook and smoked from underground fires and
exploding waterspouts, a full scale expedition was organized in
1870
by Nathaniel Langford. The trip lasted four weeks, and though plagued
by rain, snow, sickness, hunger, accidents and fatigue, the things
they saw made the trip an incredible one. "We are all overwhelmed
with astonishment at what we have seen," wrote Langford in
his diary, "and feel that we have been near the very presence
of the Almighty."
While all of the members of the expedition kept
journals, Langford's journal records an evening campfire chat that
has become a legend.
"Last
night, and also this morning in camp, the entire party had a rather
unusual discussion. The proposition was made by some member that
we utilize the result of our exploration by taking... land at
the most prominent points of interest... One member of our party
suggested that if there could be secured by preemption a good
title to two or three quarter sections of land opposite the lower
fall of the Yellowstone and extending down the river along the
canyon, they would eventually become a source of great profit
to the owners. Another member of the party thought that it would
be more desirable to take up a quarter section of land at the
Upper Geyser Basin, for the reason that the locality could be
more easily reached by tourists and pleasure seekers. A third
suggestion was that each member of the party preempt a claim,
and in order that no one should have an advantage over the other,
the whole should be thrown into a common pool for the benefit
of the entire party. Mr. Hedges then said that he did not approve
of any of these plans - that there ought to be no private ownership
of any portion of that region, but that the whole of it ought
to be set apart as a great National Park, and that each one of
us ought to make an effort to have this accomplished. His suggestion
met with an instantaneous and favorable response from all - except
one - of the members of our party, and each hour since the matter
was first broached, our enthusiasm has increased. It has been
the main theme of our conversation today as we journeyed. I lay
awake half of last night thinking about it - and if my wakefulness
deprived my bedfellow (Hedges) of any sleep, he has only himself
and his disturbing National Park proposition to answer for it."
While it may be questioned when Langford wrote his journal and why
the conversation did not impress others enough to write about it
in their journals, when the expedition returned and its members
told what they'd seen, articles about the park proposal began to
appear in local newspapers. The next summer, because of all the
interest stirred up, two new expeditions entered Yellowstone, one
military and the other an official geological survey under Dr. F.V.
Hayden. These groups discovered even more wonders, gained new facts
and figures to confirm earlier discoveries, and returned with photographs
- proving to all that the wonders were real.
In Washington, the Yellowstone Park bill was
introduced into Congress in December, 1871. Due to intensive informational
efforts by Langford and others, the Senate passed the bill within
six weeks. The House approved it four weeks later. President Grant
signed the Act on March 1, 1872, thus creating the world's first
national park. The Yellowstone region was now permanently "dedicated
and set apart as a public park or a pleasuring-ground for the benefit
and enjoyment of the people."
However, more than just legislation was needed
to protect Yellowstone. Believing the park should be self-supporting,
Congress provided no appropriation, and the Superintendent served
without salary or staff. The purpose of the park was clearly defined
by the enabling act, but the legislation didn't include any legal
means for protecting features or wildlife.
Traveling through Yellowstone in 1875, the secretary
of War found that poachers were roaming freely. With elk hides bringing
six dollars apiece, more than 4,000 animals had been slaughtered
the previous winter, their antlers scattered along every hillside
and meadow. The report of another military expedition the same year
indicated vandalism is not a modern phenomenon. People who made
the difficult journey to Yellowstone were writing their names in
the geyser pools and removing ornamental work from the formations.
Few geyser formations escaped defacement. Yellowstone would not
survive unless someone was given authority to stop the devastation.
On August 17, 1886, Troop M, First U.S. Calvary,
moved into Yellowstone, relieving the civilian superintendent of
his duties. Orders were promptly issued and enforced against defacing
or removing curiosities, hunting or trapping, commercial fishing,
or stock grazing. Although Congress had been unwilling to provide
funds to the Secretary of the Interior, it now supported the military
administration. For the next 30 years, the army was responsible
for the protection of Yellowstone National Park.
In 1890 Congress established Yosemite National
Park, nearly the size of Yellowstone, as a result of persistent,
persuasive efforts led by John Muir. Next, congressional action
shifted to preservation of the giant sequoias. Logging of the great
redwoods by hack and slash methods almost wiped out the accessible
groves. Sequoia and General Grant (later part of Kings Canyon) National
Parks, were authorized in 1890 to protect the giant sequoias.
The original park idea was enhanced in 1906 by
legislation that indicated there could be other than scenic values
in the parks. Beginning in the 1880's, many people were outraged
by the widespread looting of the cliff dwellings and pueblo remains
of the Southwest. The sites were looted to supply the demands of
collectors. Mesa Verde National Park, set aside in 1906, established
the precedent of historic preservation on the national level. The
Antiquities Act was passed the same year and has proven one of the
most far-reaching pieces of park legislation ever enacted. Under
this legislation it became unlawful to remove or destroy any historic
object or to excavate any historic or prehistoric ruin on public
lands. Perhaps of even greater significance, the act empowered the
president to declare national monuments for sites on federal lands
containing outstanding historic, scientific or scenic values.
Before the year was out, President Theodore Roosevelt
created four national monuments -- Devil's Tower, Petrified Forest,
Montezuma Castle, and El Morro. Between 1906 and 1970, 87 monuments
were established by 11 presidents: 36 were historical preserves
and 51 were scientific. The Antiquities Act permitted a president
to recognize a significant area as a national monument until Congress
authorized established it a national park.
As the nation moved into the 20th century, there
were some signs of a changing attitude toward the protection of
natural resources. Theodore Roosevelt was the first president to
make conservation a national goal. His voice was a lone voice, however,
in an era when the exploitation of the country's resources was the
rule and the establishment of the parks was a concession to the
minority, rather than an expression of national purpose. Also, operational
responsibilities for the parks were scattered throughout the federal
government: from the War Department, to the Department of the Interior,
to the Department of Agriculture.
There was no defined, accepted policy to guide
administration and no continuity of personnel. So the parks came
along, one by one, each the work of a relatively few people who
saw the need. The organization that could be provided by a national
park system was sorely lacking.
In 1912, a small group of national park enthusiasts
convinced President Taft that the national parks should be placed
under unified and professional direction. Gifford Pinchot, Chief
of the Forest Service, opposed the formation of a parks bureau,
arguing that the Forest Service was the logical agency to administer
the national parks.
The historic battle over the construction of
the Hetch Hetchy Dam in Yosemite National Park aroused national
attention and polarized the conservation movement. Hetch Hetchy
was a deep, glacier-carved valley whose towering granite walls,
domes, and cascading waterfalls closely approached the grandeur
of Yosemite Valley. The city of San Francisco selected Hetch Hetchy
as the most feasible site for the construction of a reservoir. Local
politicians seemed undisturbed at the prospect of a dam destroying
a lovely valley in a national park. However, John Muir and the Sierra
Club led a fight to preserve the integrity of Yosemite and in a
surprising show of strength, blocked congressional action. Pinchot
persisted in supporting the project. The controversy dragged on
for years until in 1913 when the bill authorizing the dam passed
Congress.
Future success for a national park agency was
assured the very next year, due to a remarkable chance incident.
A Chicago borax manufacturer wrote to an old friend he had known
30 years earlier at the University of California, complaining about
conditions in the national parks. The friend, Franklin K. Lane,
happened to be the Secretary of the Interior, and he was looking
for a man who could help bring some order into the management of
the Interior's national parks. The writer was Stephen T. Mather.
The letter of complaint was hardly a rare item
for a Secretary of the Interior to receive then or now. His letter
described deplorable conditions Mather had observed on a camping
trip to Yosemite and Sequoia. Mather's protest brought a quick and
historic reply: "Dear Steve, If you don't like the way the
national parks are being run, come on down to Washington and run
them yourself."
In January, 1915, Mather was sworn in as an assistant
to the Secretary of the Interior, in charge of national parks and
Horace Albright his chief assistant.
The task awaiting Mather and Albright was enormous,
but everything hinged on getting a bill through Congress to establish
a parks bureau, which would then have to be organized, funded and
staffed. Substantial increases in appropriation would be needed
for existing parks and monuments; a nationwide publicity campaign
had to be launched to generate public interest and support and concessionaires
had to be stimulated to improve hotels, camps and other facilities.
Congress also had to be persuaded to establish new parks and to
defeat bills authorizing substandard areas.
Parks are good for the country and incidentally
good for business, was Mather's message. As his promotional schemes
multiplied, Mather hit upon a real winner, one that has never failed
to gain friends for the parks. In the summer of 1915 he invited
a carefully chosen group of citizens on a camping trip through Sequoia
and Yellowstone. Through contacts made on this trip, Mather convinced
Congress to appropriate half the purchase price for Grant Forest,
a private inholding within Sequoia National Park. Then Mather turned
to another contact from the trip, Gilbert H. Grosvenor. The National
Geographic Society supplied the remaining funds and acquired the
sequoia grove, the first of many subsequent gifts to the parks.
Despite Mather's considerable effort and the
great public interest generated, no action was taken on the Park
Service bill in 1915, but the following year Mather organized national
park defenders for a major lobbying campaign. The promotional effort
paid off. On August 25, 1916, President Woodrow Wilson signed the
bill establishing a National Park Service.
The National Park Act spoke in only the most
general terms regarding how the new organization should provide
for public use while protecting park resources, but it has proved
an enduring and often-quoted statement that has never been improved
upon. The Park Service was established to "... conserve the
scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wildlife therein,
and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and
by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of
future generations."
Creating a professional corps of rangers was
one of Mather's first priorities. Once the parks were established
and funded, personnel was needed to manage the parks on a day-to-day
basis. That's where we fit in.
From this brief history of the National Park
Service, it's clear that committed individuals have made this park
system what it is today. Committed individuals are the only way
this park system can continue to support the ideal of conservation
and enjoyment. We, as committed seasonal rangers, are the present-day
"lobbyists" for the national parks with every public person
or family we meet.
As seasonal rangers, we are servants of the public
- they are our employers, our bosses. But we are also their teachers,
their instructors and their leaders. This makes it a difficult task,
to do the job of a National Park Service Ranger well. It's not easy
to play the roles of teacher, servant, and diplomat all at once,
but that's what is being asked of you. It can be one of the most
challenging experiences you'll ever have.
How
NPS Areas are Established
National parks,
historic parks, military parks, battlefield parks, memorials, memorial
parks, cemeteries, parkways, and recreation areas are established
by Acts of Congress.
National monuments are established by Presidential
Proclamation issued pursuant to the Act of the Congress approved
on June 8, 1906 (34 Stat. 225) or by an Act of Congress.
National historic sites are established by the
Secretary of the Interior pursuant to an Act of Congress approved
on August 21, 1935 (49 Stat. 666).
Types
of National Park Service Areas
National
Parks
National Parks
are areas of national significance containing a variety of resources
and encompassing a large land or water area. It has been set aside
for the preservation and protection of the resources and dedicated
to public use and inspiration.
National
Monuments
A National Monument
is intended to preserve at least one nationally significant resource.
They are generally smaller than a national park. They are established
by Presidential Proclamation, or by an Act of Congress.
National
Recreation Areas
National Recreation
Areas are diverse areas which include surrounding reservoirs impounded
by dams built by federal agencies and also other lands and waters
set aside for recreation use, including areas in urban centers.
National
Seashores and National Lakeshores
National Seashores
and Lakeshores preserve shoreline areas and off-shore islands and
have been set aside to preserve natural values while at the same
time providing water orientated recreation.
National
Parkways
National Parkways
are elongated parks featuring roads designed for pleasure travel
and embracing scenic recreational, or historic features of national
significance.
National
Historic Parks
National Historic
Parks are areas set aside to commemorate a significant phase of
American history.
National
Battlefield Park, National Battlefield Site
These areas
are associated with American military history.
National
Historic Sites
National Historic
sites are sites, buildings, and objects of national historical significance
which are preserved for the inspiration and benefit of the people
of the United States.
National
Memorials
National Memorials
are structures or areas designated to commemorate ideas, events,
or personages of national significance.
Different types of areas require different management
practices and policies. Each National Park Service area is classified
as a natural, historic or recreational area. Wind Cave National
Park and Jewel Cave National Monument are classified as natural
areas.
Other
types of areas which do not fit these categories include:
Performing
Arts Areas
Areas set aside
for the performing arts include, Wolf Trap Farm Park for the Performing
Arts, Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.
National
Landmarks
National Landmarks
are properties not maintained by the National Park Service, but
recognized as having national importance in a particular field.
Wild
and Scenic River System
The National
Park Service has the responsibility to administer the National Wild
and Scenic River System. The state or federal agency responsible
for the management of a designated river is specified in the river's
enabling legislation. Rivers are designated as wild, scenic or recreational
and are classified according to the natural qualities they possess.
National
Trail System
The National
Park Service has the responsibility to administer the National Trails
System. There are four types of trails: congressionally designated
long-distance National Scenic Trails and National Historic Trails,
side or connecting trails and National Recreation Trails. Local,
state and federal agencies are responsible for managing the designated
trails.
Affiliated
Areas
These area are
properties that are neither federally owned nor directly administered
by the NPS but which utilize NPS technical or financial assistance.
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