The 1920s and
the New Deal

Earth, Wind, and Fire

Fashion Kills Off Birds

Bird conservation

          George Bird Grinnell, editor, Field and Stream

–          Audubon Society, 1880s; national organization by 1905

          Hunters & gun companies act

–          American Game Protective Association, 1911

–          States establish hunting seasons & licenses

–          US Biological Survey regulates bird hunting, 1913

Wildlife conservation

         1920s rise in sport hunting and fishing

–         Democratization of hunting

          Army surplus rifles

–         Fishing spots polluted, filled, paved

–         Wetlands filled; waterfowl gone

Fish conservation

         Izaak Walton League, 1922

–         Founded by Chicago businessmen

–         100,000 members, mostly in the Midwest

         1923 threat to 300 miles of
Mississippi bottomlands

–         Congress: 300-mile, $1.5 million refuge

Decline of Progressive Conservation

            Retreat after 1914: “conservation extremists”

–            Western opposition

            No more withdrawing land from development

            No more regulations from Washington

            Conservationists out of influence

–            1912 Republican-Progressive split

Conservation in the New Deal

         1932: Franklin Delano Roosevelt

–         Idolizes cousin Theodore

–         Progressives bolt to Democratic Party

          Former Republicans: Secretaries of Interior and Agriculture

         Conservation: priority of prosperity

Civilian Conservation Corps

          Military-style camps for unemployed men

–          Forestry

–          Soil erosion

–          Flood control

–          Roads and trails

–          Visitors’ centers for parks

          Spread appreciation for conservation

CCC camp in Berkshires

CCC highway beautification

CCC: watering pinetrees

CCC builds Texas parks

New Deal Conservation Agencies

          Soil Conservation Service (1933)

          Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)

–          Poverty and environmental ruin

           Harness unruly river for human benefit

           Fertilizer & public power for poor farmers

–          Centrally-controlled refashioning of landscape

–          Great success — never repeated

–          No consideration of ecological effects

TVA map

TVA flood control

TVA tree nursery

TVA
Dams

TVA rural electrification

Parks Expansion

         Secretary of Interior Harold Ickes

         10 new parks and monuments

–         New, undeveloped National Parks

          Kings Canyon

          Olympic

          Everglades

         Ordered desegregation of National Parks

Building dams

          Example of Hoover (Boulder) Dam

          Dams: something for everyone

–          Jobs

–          Public power

–          Boost for the economy

Renewed concern for wildlife

          Drastic drop in waterfowl: 100 to 20 million

–          Product of drought and development

          “Ding” Darling, Biological Survey 1933–35

–          Migratory Waterfowl Division

           1934: Duck Stamp Act

           By 1940: 159 new refuges of 7.5 million acres

–          1940: Fish & Wildlife Svc. in Interior Dept.

           Unified game policy

–          With gun companies, founds National Wildlife Federation, 1938

Wilderness

         Problem of the automobile

 

Wilderness

         Wilderness in National Forests

–         Aldo Leopold

          2-week trip; Gila Wilderness, 1924

–         Bob Marshall

         Protection of Appalachian Trail from CCC

–         Benton McKaye & Harvey Broome

         Wilderness Society, 1935