Midnight Forests
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Midnight Forests was a nickname given to the forests created by President of the United States Theodore Roosevelt near the end of his term as president. "In 1891 the United States Congress passed a law allowing the president to place certain federally owned properties into 'forest reserves'"[1]. Theodore Roosevelt was the president that had preserved the most land for national parks. During his time in office, he had drew aside over 150 million acres of land into the reserve. Businesses that viewed Roosevelt's actions as intervening in the free market objected, and together with their political allies they managed to get enough support in Congress by 1907 to change the 1891 law. According to Ocala News, "Because Roosevelt created so many national forests, Congress tacked a rider onto a spending bill taking away a president's power to create national forests. Roosevelt had 10 days to sign it" [2]. Roosevelt had no way of vetoing the agricultural bill it was attached to without getting more political enemies. The president spent the few days deciding with Gifford Pinchot, head of the U.S. Forest Service, the areas to mark as national parks. He waited until the last minute, after he had proclaimed about 16 million acres, to sign the bill presented by the United States Congress. These acres were called the Midnight Forests because they were created so quickly.
[edit] References
- ^ Brands, H. W. (1997c) "T. R.: the Last Romantic"
- ^ Latham Carr, Susan. 2007. 'Forest Service must allow for use of lands, but still preserve them for future'. Available from: http://www.ocala.com/article/20071230/NEWS/712300346/1001/NEWS01
[edit] Further Reading
- Hines, Gary. (2005c) Midnight Forests: A Story Of Gifford Pinchot And Our National Forests. ISBN 1563971488.

