|
Earle H. Clapp (1877-1970)
Acting Chief of the Forest Service, 1939-1943
Earle Hart Clapp was born in North Rush, New York, on October 15, 1877. Clapp
attended Cornell University, then transferred to the University of Michigan where
he received his B.A. in forestry in 1905. He first started to work for the Forest
Service on the Medicine Bow Forest Reserve as a timber surveyor. In 1906, he worked
on several forest reserves (now national forests) to develop techniques for determining
minimum prices for timber. The following year, Clapp was appointed as chief of timber
sales in the Washington D.C. office. In 1909, he worked in the national forests
in the southwest, then in 1915, he was made the chief of the new Forest Service
branch of research. He was appointed as associate chief in 1935, then to acting
chief in 1939 after Chief Silcox died.
Clapp was never officially chief of the agency, apparently because President
Roosevelt did not want to approve the appointment. Clapp served in an acting capacity
until 1943 when Lyle Watts was appointed chief.
|
| Forest of Discovery dedication, 1941. |
During Clapp's time as chief, he was faced with the continuation of the Civilian
Conservation Corps projects on the national forests, meeting the need for forest
experts to help in the aftermath of the disastrous New England Hurricane of 1938,
opposing transfer of the Forest Service from Agriculture to Interior, and mobilizing
the Nation's forest resources behind the war effort (World War II).
Cutting of national forest timber was stepped up; special studies and tests
were made for the armed forces; and forest lookout stations were staffed along the
both East and West coasts in 1942-43 to detect enemy aircraft. Clapp also was unsuccessfully
persistent in supporting federal regulation of timber cutting on private forest
land, and urging the addition of 150 million acres of mostly cut-over land to the
national forests, and alleviating poverty in depressed communities by means of reforestation
projects. During his last two years, Clapp was given a major responsibility to prepare
a new appraisal of the nation's forest situation.
|
| Fire prevention publicity photo featuring Clapp and actress Paulette Goddard, 1942. |
Earle H. Clapp wrote:
"Scarcity of natural resources and their control by the very few may pave the
way through widespread human misery to despotism and dictatorship; while an abundance
of natural resources, accessible to people generally, makes for democracy and freedom.
|
| Clapp and Col. Allen S. Peck. |
The struggle to create and to administer the national forests gave birth to
the entire conservation movement in the United States. At the end of the voluminous
public land act of 1891, a little section of 68 words gave the President the authority
to create from the public domain what we now call national forests. A paragraph
of 133 words as a rider to the Sundry Civil Appropriations Act of 1897 provided
for the administration of these forests. I know of no other legislation in our history
which more broadly and as briefly authorized an undertaking so far-reaching in its
consequences. The Act of March 3, 1891, was a clean break with the long established
public policy of indiscriminate disposal of all public lands regardless of what
might be done with the resources on them. That was a bold and daring thing to do
in the face of public opinion of years ago. It took courage on the part of its advocates
in Congress and out."
Additional Resources:
1936 speech given by Clapp on forest and range lands management.
|