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Research Sites

Jack Shope recording wind velocity, Coweeta, 1952. Draining soil samples, Coweeta Lab, 1941. Ranger Bernard Egar examining tree samples, George Washington National Forest, 1939.

Research has been an important aspect of the Forest Service's work dating back to the early years of the U.S. Division of Forestry. It was Bernhard E. Fernow who began to lay the first real foundations of forest research during his time as Division of Forestry chief (1886-1898), producing numerous influential scientific reports. Research operations were further expanded following the inception of the Forest Service in 1905.  Forest Service Chief Gifford Pinchot authorized fire research studies in these early years of the agency, as well as significant work in the area of forest management.

Coconino Experiment Station (now Fort Valley Experimental Forest) began operation in Arizona in August 1908 as the nation's first Forest Service research facility. Over the next five years, five additional forest experiment stations would be established throughout the West. Gifford Pinchot's successor as chief, Henry S. Graves, continued to expand research work within the agency, opening the Forest Products Laboratory in 1910 and consolidating the various regional research projects under the Branch of Research in 1915, with Earle H. Clapp placed in charge.

In 1921, the Appalachian Forest Experiment Station in Asheville, NC and the Southern Forest Experiment Station in New Orleans were established as the first Forest Service research stations in the eastern U.S.

The McSweeney-McNary Act of 1928 further advanced research within the agency, giving it a recognized separation from forest administration work. The act also led to the establishment of a full network of regional experiment stations to serve as centers of Forest Service research.

Map of USFS Experimental Forests and Ranges.
Current locations of USFS experimental forests and ranges. (click to enlarge)

Today, the Forest Service operates five regional research stations, as well as 80 experimental forests and ranges, and extensive research programs in all 50 states and U.S. territories. Through the International Institute of Tropical Forestry, the agency supports research around the world.

Additional Pages:

Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory (North Carolina)
Forest Products Laboratory (Madison, Wisconsin)
Fort Valley Experimental Forest (Arizona)
Olustee Experimental Forest (Florida)
Wind River Experimental Forest (Washington)

Further Reading:

Steen, Harold K. Forest Service Research: Finding Answers to Conservation's Questions.
West, Terry L. "Research in the USDA Forest Service: A Historian's View."

Image of early USFS research. Seed dissemination testing, Vancouver, Washington, 1926.
Seed dissemination testing, Vancouver, Washington, January 1926.

The following links take you to external websites containing historical information about U.S. Forest Service research sites:

Crossett Experimental Forest (Arkansas)
Fort Valley Experimental Forest Station (Arizona)
Northeastern Research Station
Pacific Northwest Research Station
Priest River Experiment Station (Idaho)
Rocky Mountain Research Station
Southern Research Station

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Updated: 8/25/2010