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Richard E. McArdle (1899-1983)
8th Chief of the Forest Service, 1952-1962
Richard Edwin McArdle was born on February 25, 1899, in Lexington, Kentucky.
He received the B.S. and M.S. degrees in forestry at the University of Michigan
in 1923 and 1924. Just after graduating, he began working for the Forest Service
as a silviculturist for the Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station
in Portland, Oregon. McArdle took three years off beginning in 1927 to complete
his Ph.D., returning to Portland to the research station. He left the Forest Service
in 1934 to be the dean of the University of Idaho's School of Forestry. He then
returned to the Forest Service to be the director of a new forest and range experiment
station at Fort Collins, Colorado, then to another directorship at the Appalachian
(now Southeastern) Station in Asheville, North Carolina. He moved to the Washington
D.C. office in 1944, then served as chief of the Forest Service from July 1952 to
March 1962.
McArdle, being the first chief to hold a Ph.D. and to have been a researcher,
felt the need for a balanced management of the national forests. He also pushed
for long-range plans on the national forests and in the research branch. The Timber
Resource Review was published which evaluated the total timber resources in the
United States. The landmark Multiple Use-Sustained Yield Act of 1960 established
policy for the broad development and administration of the national forests in the
public interest. He was successful in increasing intensive management of the national
forests, as well as providing for reforestation of logged and other lands, curbing
mining and grazing abuses, and accelerating various recreation projects.
During his tenure, the Forest Service was assigned the management of seven
million acres of western plains lands, which they organized as national grasslands.
McArdle was also instrumental in upgrading Forest Service personnel, hiring new
specialists to bring about intensive management, and to increase the professionalism
of employees. He improved relations with the timber industry by backing away from
earlier proposals to regulate timber harvesting practices on private lands.
Richard E. McArdle wrote:
"Farm woodland and other small private forests hold the key to this Nation's
future timber supply. These lands, generally in poor condition, are the greatest
potential source of wood fiber. Producing more wood on these lands requires concerted
effort by state and federal foresters, forest industries, and the landowners."
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