Even in Congress a sizable chunk of gold, carefully concealed, will outtalk and outfight all the nation on a subject like forestry, well smothered in ignorance, and in which the money interests of only a few are conspicuously involved. Under these circumstances, the bawling, blethering oratorical stuff drowns the voice of God himself. Yet the dawn of a new day in forestry is breaking. Honest citizens see that only the rights of the government are being trampled, not those of the settlers. Only what belongs to all alike is reserved, and every acre that is left should be held together under the federal government as a basis for a general policy of administration for the public good. The people will not always be deceived by selfish opposition, whether from lumber and mining corporations or from sheepmen and prospectors, however cunningly brought forward underneath fables and gold.
Emerson says that things refuse to be mismanaged long. An exception would seem to be found in the case of our forests, which have been mismanaged rather long, and now come desperately near being like smashed eggs and spilt milk. Still, in the long run the world does not move backward. The wonderful advance made in the last few years, in creating four national parks in the West, and thirty forest reservations, embracing nearly forty million acres; and in the planting of the borders of streets and highways and spacious parks in all the great cities, to satisfy the natural taste and hunger for landscape beauty and righteousness that God has put, in some measure, into every human being and animal, shows the trend of awakening public opinion. The making of the far-famed New York Central Park was opposed by even good men, with misguided pluck, perseverance, and ingenuity; but straight right won its way, and now that park is appreciated. So we confidently believe it will be with our great national parks and forest reservations. There will be a period of indifference on the part of the rich, sleepy with wealth, and of the toiling millions, sleepy with poverty, most of whom never saw a forest; a period of screaming protest and objection from the plunderers, who are as unconscionable and enterprising as Satan. But light is surely coming, and the friends of destruction will preach and bewail in vain.
The United States government has always been proud of the welcome it has extended to good men of every nation, seeking freedom and homes and bread. Let them be welcomed still as nature welcomes them, to the woods as well as to the prairies and plains. No place is too good for good men, and still there is room. They are invited to heaven, and may well be allowed in America. Every place is made better by them. Let them be as free to pick gold and gems from the hills, to cut and hew, dig and plant, for homes and bread, as the birds are to pick berries from the wild bushes, and moss and leaves for nests. The ground will be glad to feed them, and the pines will come down from the mountains for their homes as willingly as the cedars came from Lebanon for Solomon’s temple. Nor will the woods be the worse for this use, or their benign influences be diminished any more than the sun is diminished by shining. Mere destroyers, however, tree-killers, wool and mutton men, spreading death and confusion in the fairest groves and gardens ever planted,—let the government hasten to cast them out and make an end of them. For it must be told again and again, and be burningly borne in mind, that just now, while protective measures are being deliberated languidly, destruction and use are speeding on faster and farther every day. The axe and saw are insanely busy, chips are flying thick as snowflakes, and every summer thousands of acres of priceless forests, with their underbrush, soil, springs, climate, scenery, and religion, are vanishing away in clouds of smoke, while, except in the national parks, not one forest guard is employed.
All sorts of local laws and regulations have been tried and found wanting, and the costly lessons of our own experience, as well as that of every civilized nation, show conclusively that the fate of the remnant of our forests is in the hands of the federal government, and that if the remnant is to be saved at all, it must be saved quickly.
Any fool can destroy trees. They cannot run away; and if they could, they would still be destroyed,—chased and hunted down as long as fun or a dollar could be got out of their bark hides, branching horns, or magnificent bole backbones. Few that fell trees plant them; nor would planting avail much towards getting back anything like the noble primeval forests. During a man’s life only saplings can be grown, in the place of the old trees—tens of centuries old—that have been destroyed. It took more than three thousand years to make some of the trees in these Western woods,—trees that are still standing in perfect strength and beauty, waving and singing in the mighty forests of the Sierra. Through all the wonderful, eventful centuries since Christ’s time—and long before that—God has cared for these trees, saved them from drought, disease, avalanches, and a thousand straining, leveling tempests and floods; but he cannot save them from fools,—only Uncle Sam can do that.
APPENDIX
I. NATIONAL PARKS
| Map No. | Name | Location | Established | Characteristic Features | Area: Acres | Private Claims: Acres11 | Revenue 1908 | Appropriation, 1909 | Visitors 1908 |
| 1 | Yellowstone1 | Wyoming | March 1, 18723 | Unique volcanic mountain scenery | 22,142,720.00 | None | $4,125.65 | $73,000.0018 | 19,542 |
| 2 | Hot Springs1 | Arkansas | June 16, 18803 | Medicinal springs, wooded mountains | 911.63 | None | 28,090.00 | None | 898,00422 14,418 |
| 3 | Sequoia1 | California | Sept. 25, 18903 | “Big Trees” | 161,597.00 | 3,716.9612 | 59.72 | 15,550.00 | 1,251 |
| 4 | Yosemite1 8 | California | Oct. 1, 18903 | Unique glacial valleys and snow mountains | 719,622.00 | 19,827.0013 | 18,260.98 | 30,000.00 | 8,850 |
| 5 | Gen. Grant1 | California | Oct. 1, 18903 | “Big Trees” | 2,536.00 | 160.0012 | None | 2,000.00 | 1,773 |
| 6 | Casa Grande1 | Arizona | June 22, 18924 | Prehistoric dwellings | 480.009 | None | None | 900.00 | No count |
| 7 | Mt. Rainier2 | Washington | March 2, 18993 | Snow peak and glaciers | 207,360.00 | 18.2014 | 1,064.84 | 28,000.0019 | 2,826 |
| 8 | Crater Lake1 | Oregon | May 22, 19023 | Lake in extinct volcano | 159,360.0010 | 1,914.22 | 15.00 | 3,000.00 | 5,27523 |
| 9 | Platt6 | Oklahoma | July 1, 19023 | Mineral springs | 848.22 | None | 72.00 | 16,000.0020 | 26,00024 |
| 10 | Wind Cave1 | So. Dakota | Jan. 9, 19033 | Caverns | 10,522.00 | 719.3915 | 400.00 | 2,500.00 | 3,17124 |
| 11 | Sully’s Hill5 | No. Dakota | June 2, 19045 | Wooded hills and lake | 780.00 | None | None | None21 | 25023 |
| 12 | Mesa Verde1 | Colorado | June 29, 19063 | Prehistoric dwellings | 42,376.00 | 2,080.0016 | None | 7,500.00 | 8025 |
| 5-mile strip surrounding Mesa Verde1 | Colorado | June 29, 1906 | Prehistoric dwellings | 175,360.00 | 50,346.1417 | ||||
| TOTALS | 3,624,9472.85 | 78,781.9111 | $52,088.19 | $178,450.00 | |||||
| 13* | Glacier | Montana | Pending | 915,000.00 | 6,000.00 |
Name, location, and establishment:
1 Constituted from unpatented lands of the public domain.