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OCR Page 1 of 2PSF
Interior: Harold IcKes
Jan. - July 1940
PSF
OF
STATE LINTE RIOR
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
WASHINGTON
JAN
January 2, 1940
THE WHITE 4 4 14 PM 40 ECEIVED HOUSE 14
I
My dear Mr. President:
I have been advised that about December 18, Gifford Pinchot
wrote a letter to every member of the faculty in the various forestry
colleges of the country with which he enclosed a suggested protest
letter to be written to you opposing the transfer of Forestry from
Agriculture. If he is doing this, it may be that he and others are
stimulating the Forest lobby to activity in other directions.
For this reason I venture to suggest that the order transferring
Forestry to Interior be sent in just as soon as possible after the
new session convenes. If this is done the lobbyiets will not be
able to gather so much momentum. I hope that this reorganization
order will be handled in the Congress in the manner in which your
first two orders were handled.
In this same connection I again renew my suggestion that an
Acting Chief Forester be appointed at this time. The reason for
this seems to be obvious. It may also be that on further consider-
ation you will not want & technical forester for Chief but an able
administrator. After all, technical men can always be employed.
Sincerely yours,
Harold 7.Febra 7.9ches
Secretary of the Interior.
The President,
The White House.
PSF-Ickes PSF
Jile Personal
EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT WHITE HOUSE
NATIONAL RESOURCES PLANNING BOARD
WASHINGTON, D.C.
JAN 4 10 32 AM '40
January 3, 194RECEIVED
MEMORANDUM FOR The President:
Your suggestions concerning development of the Grand Coulee Project
and the settlement of the Columbia Basin (your memorandum of December 21
to the Secretary of the Interior) were welcomed by the members of the
National Resources Planning Board. We are arranging to bring them to the
attention of the several agencies already at work on various aspects of
the problem, as follows:
1. Land and Migration Problems. The Pacific Northwest Regional
Planning Commission (financed by a $100,000 P.W.A. allotment to this
Board) is pushing a cooperative study which will result in recommendations
of policy on land-use and migration and a six-year program of public works
in the Northwest before the end of the next fiscal year.
2. Columbia Basin. The same commission and the field office of the
Board are cooperating in a major investigation by the Bureau of Reclama-
tion involving prospective land-use and manufacturing development of the
Columbia Basin. This study is under the general direction of Dr. Harlan H.
Barrows, who has worked with this Board on the Water Resources Committee,
the Northern Great Plains Committee, the Upper Rio Grande Investigation,
and similar projects. For this investigation the Bureau of Reclamation
has secured the cooperation of the Washington State Planning Council, the
State College of Agriculture, and many other State and Federal agencies.
A report is proposed in serial form beginning in May.
3. Power and Industry. Under en agreement among the Bonneville Ad-
ministration, the Pacific Northwest Regional Planning Commission, and the
Pacific Northwest Council, studies are now under way on opportunities for
industrial employment and development.
The Board will continue to correlate these studies and will report to
you from time to time on their progress in the formulation of plans and
policies.
Respectfully submitted:
Frederic A. Delang
Chairman
I n
/ I to & I / Phone I 2 MM =
I 5 & to In # E 5 & I / Importer If É
2 Address I R (Am # I w
BERONISCER БГУИИИС
/ I 5 I
EXECUTIVE OLLICE Ot THE BOYE
THE WHITE HOUSE
Weshington
Docember 21, 1939.
MEMORANDUM FOR
HON. FREDERIC he DELAND
FOR YOUR INFORMATION
F.D.R. (typed)
(Initialled) F.D.R.
MEMORANDOM FOR
December 21, 1939.
THE SECRETARY OF TED: INTERIOR
In view of the fuct that the Grand Coulse Dum will be
finished early in 1941, I believe it 1s time for us to plan
for its use.
This use divides itself into two partet
(a) Surplus power over and above power needs
for pumping water into the Columbia Basin.
This subject should be referred to the National
Power Policy Committee. It affects, of course,
the tie in with Bonneville and with existing
power consumer cooperatives, rural lines, etc.,
and it has a bearing on a possible third dam
in the Columbia River, half way between Grand
Coulse and Bonneville.
(b) The development of the Columbia Basin
itself. I feel very strongly on this subject.
I understand that it is believed by Reclamation
Buroou that when water is provided, 80,000
families can be put on the land. If this
estimate is correct it will mean approximately
20,000 other femilies who will be engaged in
services such 0.5 gasoline stations, small
stores, trunsportation, local governmental
operations, etc., etc. I hope the Government
cen Lay down a definite policy that all lends will
be open only to relief fumilies or fumilies which for
many different reasons have abendoned their homes and
fled to the coastal region or are now "adrift" in
various parts of the country. In other words, want
to give first chance to the "Grapes of Wrath"
fomilies of the nation.
I realize that a percentage of those funilies
are shiftless and that en even larger percentage of
them are 00 ignorent of farm and home economics that
without help they would malco a failure on this new
land.
The work of the rurel rehebilitation and KPA colonization projects
during the past seven years has demonstrated nevertheless that given
supervision and instruction for a few years this condition of ignorance
con, in most cases, be overcome. This entails in any plenning a fairly
large overhead covering supervision and instruction during the first few
years. It envisages also a percentage of familios who, no matter how much
they are supervised end instructed, will fail to make good. Such families
would, of course, have to be replaced by others who would make good.
All in all this is a tremendous subject and I call your attention to
the definite possibility of planning in the Columbia Basin for certain
local industries to supplement agriculture - decentrelized industries
which will fill purely local needs and not export their production beyond
the Columbia Basin.
It is obvious from the history of Oregon and "ashington apple growing,
for example, that there has probably been too much apple production in
that area. There is, using the sime illustration, a growing improvement
in apple production in the Appalachian section with the result that
proportionately fewer Pacific Coast apples are sold in local custom markets
than formerly. The eastern and southern growers have at last begun to
learn how to grade, pick and store their applec.
In the same my there is a tendency in the Far West to grow too many
onions and similar specialized crops, thus creating too great dependence on
eastern markets and too little diversification of crops.
The Columbia Basin project requires, therefore, & comprehensive
agricultural and industrial economic survey. /The Busin can #ventually
support 500,000 of our citizens, and I should like to have it so planned
that opportunity for settlement will be given primarily to those fumilies
which are today in need.
Finally, the whole Basin should be plenned with the thought of making
the Basin economically self-supporting as for as possible. There is no
reason, for instance, why the Busin should not make the equivalent of its
whole shoe supply because hides are available close to the site. Certain
woolon goods can be manufactured and it might be possible to work out small
glass and crockery factories.
This part of the survey should, I think, be referred to the National
Resources Committee, and I an sending a copy of this memorandum to Mr. Delano.
(initialled) F.D.R.
F.D.R. (typed)
c
0
P
Y
10 o Jan '
1940
THE
SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR,
film filmel
my Mail
Dien Mr. President
Fl belated note To TEll you to
what Q danling you one To have
thia. ThoughT of sinding The SECAS,
service man ouT TO waTch ours
our baby while we maing are Qway.
Q don't know how you can V2 so
ThoughTful. buT you IND one unfailinaly
is
so is and your QEnerosity warms The The
on St Tindin pusb past
eockles Wonor of own onlin, hearts.
This respite from The
hurry and 1 of Washington is
making new people of Henold and me -
and. Glisur ME, we harded a little
refunlishing. As luck would have
iT, we both came down with colds
and The forezing north winds didg't
help w To fuick recorry. Think of
icq on The bird bath, in Florida !!
BUT now ur are will aqain: fishing
Purny day with, iT seems To me,
minereulous luek, allho Hanold Quesanss
me ThaT iT is Small Time sTuLt eam-
pensal To what he is used TO "Lt) The
DAY TorTuges or something. HE furn
has The Timesity TO each me when
l am handling a sed-lish with
consumments skill. a am afraid The
you here ruined him! Bui he is
Kinda nice, anyway.
u/e have Two supert limenieks for
you!
Our very GST - always
Jane lekes
Brooksville, Florida.
Tenuary 10, 1940.
PSF
PRIVATE
January 23, 1940.
MEMORANDUM FOR
H. L. I.
I wish to goodness you would not be 80 sarcastic.
As you know, I have promised to send that reorganization
message up and obviously there has been no going back on
what I told you.
I merely asked you to go to see George Norris
because we need his support and I thought it was simpler
for you to talk with him right away rather than to permit
him to come out with some adverse expression of @pinion
when the message goes up.
You will, I think, also realize the predicament
your lack of faith has put me in when I tell you the
following:
This morning when I asked Mrs. R. what people she
had asked for dinner tonight before the meeting on the
Cause and Cure of War, she mentioned that the Pinchots
were coming. The invitation to them was, of course,
without my knowledge. However, as I was afraid that you
might think that they were being invited at my behest,
I decided immediately that I would dine in my room,
thus avoiding seeing the Pinchots and the other guests.
F. D. R.
STATE OF STATE IRIOR
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
WASHINGTON
January 23, 1940.
My dear Mr. President:
I am distressed by your memorandum of this date which I have
just received. I was not conscious of feeling sarcastic when I
wrote you the letter referred to. I was feeling badly because I
was afraid that Forestry was slipping away but that was all the feel-
ing that I had. Even if I had been disposed to write in a sarcastic
vein to the President, I would have refrained from doing 80. I
hope that you will believe that I had no such intention and that I
deeply regret that my language was 80 badly chosen as to create an
impression that was not intended.
I understood perfectly why you wanted me to see George Norris
and I am paving the way in the hope that I may see him in circum-
stances in which I will not be running against a stone wall so far
as he is concerned.
I also regret the situation as to the Pinchots. I believe
that I know fairly accurately how you feel about them and I
would not have misunderstood at all the fact that they had
dined with you. I surely know enough to realize that a man in
your position must often have as guests people representing all
shades of opinion on all subjects.
I hope that I do not have to reaffirm the faith in you that has
now been my inspiration for seven years. I would rather forget all
about Forestry and everything else connected with official life than
to have any personal misunderstanding with a man under whom I have
been delighted to serve and whom I regard, as I have told you more
than once, as the outstanding statesman of the world.
Sincerely yours,
Horold T.Febro
Secretary of the Interior.
The President,
The White House.
2
OF
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
file pus
WASHINGTON
January 22, 1940.
Dear Missy:
Once again I am taking advantage of your courtesy
and imposing upon your good nature. The enclosed letter,
addressed to the President, is a very important one, and
I hope that you will bring it to his attention at an early
date when he will read it.
Sincerely yours,
Secretary of the Interior.
Miss Marguerite LeHand,
Secretary to the President,
The White House.
Inc.
OF
THE SINTE IRIOR
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
WASHINGTON
January 22, 1940.
My dear Mr. President:
I was shocked by your suggestion after Cabinet meeting on Friday
that there might be a further delay in transferring Forestry to In-
terior as the result of a visit to you by Senator George W. Norris.
I will, of course, discuss this matter with Senator Norris at the
earliest possible moment, but it does not seem to me that the ques-
tion he raised should determine the matter.
I do not propose again to go over the arguments in support of this
transfer, but it is necessary for me to sketch in certain of the back-
ground in order to avoid the possibility, sometime in the future, of
appearing to have been less than candid with you.
It was in 1935 that you suggested a Department of Conservation.
My counter-suggestion was to change the name of "Interior" to "Con-
servation," and with your permission, a bill was sent to Congress,
first, to effectuate this change, and, second, to give you power to
interchange bureaus and agencies as between Agriculture and Interior.
This was with your full consent. That bill passed the Senate and it
could have passed the House without difficulty, if my continued pleas
for help had been fruitful. Not only did I receive no help, but Agri-
culture fought and lobbied against the bill openly and with all its
forces. There has never been a time since this bill was introduced that
it would not have been comparatively easy to create a "Department of
Conservation" and transfer to it, not only Forestry, but the other con-
servation activities of the Government which naturally would fall within
such & Department.
Then came the Reorganization fight. It may have been because of my
own great personal interest, but I think it is conservative for me to
say that, more than any other member of your Administration, I did
everything possible to advance this legislation which you desired.
After the bill had passed, I continued to importune you for a
transfer of Forestry. Sometimes I thought that you had been persuaded,
and sometimes I thought differently. I was sure that such an order
would have gone through without any difficulty at the last session of
the Congress. I was in the unsatisfactory and baffled position of
meeting passive resistance without an opportunity really to thresh
out the entire issue and arrive at a conclusion based upon what appeared
to be the facts. I think that it can hardly now be doubted that I was
right when I insisted that Forestry could have been transferred at the
last session. At least Budget Director Smith now frankly admits this,
although he was of the contrary opinion at the time.
If I had had an opportunity before your second order was sent to
Congress, I think that I could have been able to make a fairly per-
suasive argument in favor of the transfer to Interior, not only of
Forestry, but of other less important agencies, without which Interior
can never be anything but an abortive and ineffective Department of
Conservation.
2
I had no such opportunity until after the order was sent to Congress.
Then I told you very frankly how I felt and you assured me that it was
not only your full intent to transfer Forestry, but that you were going
to make Interior a "Department of Conservation."
Since that time, I have urged upon various occasions the necessity
for the filing of the order just as soon as possible after the con-
vening of this session of the Congress. I made the same representa-
tions to the Director of the Budget, with whom, I may say, I have
always been able to discuss interests affecting my Department on a
friendly basis and with a feeling that I was talking to an under-
standing man. I foresaw and predicted that opposition to the transfer
of Forestry would develop and that it might become formidable. Neces-
sarily, the longer the delay in sending up the order, the more formid-
able the opposition would become. Before Jane and I went to Florida
on the fourth of January, I again urged the importance of haste in
this matter. I told you that Gifford Pinchot was already busying
himself in opposition to any possible transfer. Apparently I made
an impression upon you that day because you told me that you would
discuss the matter later the same day with Mr. Smith.
I had hoped -- desperately hoped -- that the order would be sent
up within two or three days following our talk on January 4. One of
the reasons that I came back so early from Florida was because I was
worrying about this matter, as I have been worrying ever since your
second Reorganization Order was promulgated.
3
Now comes George Norris in an effort to block this transfer, just
as he succeeded in blocking your own proposal to have TVA clear through
Interior -- a proposal that was thoroughly sound from an organization
and an administrative point of view, and which would have been another
step toward the creation of a genuine Department of Conservation. I
admire George Norris, as I have for years, and I am not a laggard in
recognizing his contribution to the Liberal cause. Unfortunately, he
is a sentimentalist. Lilienthal, with what seemed to me to be an
entire lack of loyalty to his Chief, the President, went to Norris'
office and wept on his desk, as Lilienthal well knows how to do.
Without looking into the matter or studying the purpose that you
had in mind, Norris at once committed himself to Lilienthal. After
I had talked with him, Norris expressed the opinion that he had prob-
ably been over-hasty, but it was then too late. Who talked to Norris
with respect to Forestry, I do not know, but I suspect Gifford
Pinchot. And once again Norris lets his feelings run away with him,
although he was reasonably well convinced a year ago that this would
be a proper transfer and one in the public interest.
That which is happening is what I feared and predicted would happen.
Each day's delay gives the opposition a chance to build up support, and
Pinchot and the Forest lobby will neglect no opportunity.
To divert from the real subject of this letter: I spoke to you
Friday about Pringle's biography of Taft. Toward the end of the first
volume, he discusses the Ballinger-Finchot controverey, and if he is
right in his facts, Ballinger was the victim of as ugly a political plot
4
as has ever appeared in American political history. As you know, I
was always way over on the Pinchot side in that controversy, but if
Pringle is anywhere near the truth in his presentation of the facts,
I would not want to occupy Pinchot's place in history. Sometime you
may want to read at least this part of what Pringle has written and
you can do it in an hour.
But to get back on the main track. I have never assured anyone
that there might not be a controversy in Congress over the order to
transfer Forestry. But I do know that the longer the matter is put
off, the more likely there is to be a controversy and the more serious
it will be. Norris, himself, is Exhibit A in support of this proposi-
tion. I have not checked recently in the Senate because I have not
known definitely when the order was to go up. But I have kept in
touch with Dempsey in the House and he continues to assure me that,
in that Chamber, your order can be made to stick.
And suppose there is some controversy over this order? We don't
get much in this life, especially when we are dealing with Congress,
without a fight, and yet I seriously question whether the Democratic
majority in either House would care to oppose you with too great
vehemance on this issue. But give Pinchot, the Forest lobby and the
farm lobbies, time to unlimber their guns and begin to fire at the
members of Congress and what may be possible today may not be possible
two weeks from now.
5
Frankly, I am not now happy in my present job. Please do not mis-
understand me,Mr. President. I appreciate deeply your generous thought
in making me a member of your Cabinet, but my chief ambition and inter-
est, since you did me the honor to bring me to Washington, has been
in trying to help to create and to administer a real Department of
Conservation. TVA has been allowed to slip away. Rural Electrifica-
tion is still in a Department where, in my humble judgment, it does
not belong at all. There are other less important Federal activities
scattered here and there that belong in any genuine Department of
Conservation, but of course the keystone to the arch is Forestry.
Without Forestry there can be no Department of Conservation. And
unless it is transferred now, in my judgment, it will not be
transferred at all. At any rate, a future transfer would not be of
the slightest personal interest to me. At the best, my tenure of
office is short. At the best, I would have all too short a time to
disarm the suspicions of those who oppose the transfer and weave
Forestry into the warp and woof of its new Department. A transfer
at some indefinite later time would be too late for me.
This is my last plea to you in this matter. I believe that the
logic of the situation is with me, not only from the point of view of
the proper locus in quo for Forestry, but from the point of view of
making a real beginning in the building up of a genuine Department
of Conservation. However, the decision is with you. What I hope is
that, if you do plan to transfer Forestry, the order will go up within
6
the next day or two. This would be only good tactics. And if you
have decided that you will not transfer Forestry at this time, I
will be under additional obligations to you if you will frankly
tell me 80 .
Sincerely yours,
Harold 7.Feber
Secretary of the Interior.
The President,
The White House.
7
PSF:1940 Iches
OF THE
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
WASHINGTONHE WHITE HOUSE
January 23, 1940.
JAN 23 12 13 PM '40
RECEIVED
My dear Mr. President:
I have read, and am returning herewith, Gifford
Pinchot's letter to you of January 17, in which he repeats
his opposition to the transfer of Forestry to Interior. Of
course, I humbly recognize that Gifford Pinchot must neces-
sarily say the last word on any matter affecting Forestry
and that to venture to join issue with him would amount to
lese majeste; perhaps even to sacrilege. Accordingly, I
will not attempt to meet his arguments, which are as familiar
to you as they are to me.
After all, this whole matter has passed the stage of
argument on the merits. The case is in in full on both
sides and it only awaits the final decision of the judge.
Sincerely yours,
Secretary of the Interior.
The President,
The White House.
Enc.
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
January 15, 1940.
MEMORANDUM FOR
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
FOR YOUR INFORMATION
AND RETURN FOR OUR FILES.
F. D. R.
- form letters
PSF I Feles
January 15, 1940.
Dear Gifford:-
I have received the form letters and my
general reaction to them 1s unfavorable because
this sort of organized drive is just as such a
special group effort as drives on the Congress or
the President by separate Protestant denominations
or individuals like Coughlin or the United States
Chamber of Commerce or the Cattlemen's Associations
or, for that matter, horrid things like the K.K.K.
itself.
I &o not believe in group drives anyway
because I think they have hurt the improvement of
the general processes of administrative government
and Congressional decisions.
Furthermore, to suggest that we should
have two recreation departments doing practically
identical work, one in the Department of Agri-
culture and the other in the Department of the
Interior is wasteful and inefficient.
There are two schools of thought in
regard to the two Departments concerned -- one
is that everything that grows should be in the
Department of Agriculture and only inanimate
things, like minerals and oils, should be in the
Department of the Interior. If this were done
the Department of Agriculture would be bigger
than all the other Departments of the Government
put together, both in personnel and in money
spending, and the Department of the Interior
would have two or three minor Bureaus in it
only. One of the essentials of Government is
to prevent any one Department from becoming a tail
that runs the Federal dog!
A more logical division goes back to the
origin of both Departments. The Department of the
Interior was organized primarily to take charge of
Government owned land, and the Department of Agri-
culture was organized primarily to look after the
neede of the private land owners of the United
States.
Frankly, I an getting to the point of
believing that logio favors the latter view. And,
incidentally, the days have passed when any human
being can say that the Department of Agriculture
is wholly pure and honest and the Department of
the Interior is utterhyyblack and crooked.
Very sincerely yours,
Honorable Gifford Pinohot,
1615 Rhode Island Avenue, N.W.,
Washington, D. 6.
PSF Ickes
GIFFORD PINCHOT
MILFORD PIKE CO PA
1615 Rhode Island Ave., N. W.,
Washington, D. C.,
January 17, 1940.
The President,
The White House,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Franklin:
Many thanks for your letter of
January 15.
Here are some of the reasons why,
as a matter of sound government organization,
the Forest Service should not he transferred.
The Service was born, grew up, and
for a long generation has done admirable work
in the Department of Agriculture. There is no
tenable claim that it could do better else-
where, and no reason to expect that it could
do as well.
The Forest Service is a research
as well as an executive organization. This
union of research and administration under-
lies the progress of forestry and the morale
and efficiency of the Service. To separate
the two would ruin the Service. This union
is also the distinguishing characteristic of
the Department of Agriculture.
The Service is in constant neces-
sary cooperation with more than half of the
twenty-odd other organizations in the Depart-
ment, such as the Soil Conservation Service,
the Bureaus of Agricultural Economics, Ento-
mology, Plant Industry, etc., etc. That co-
operation would be badly dislocated if the
transfer were made.
The President
January 17, 1940.
--2--
The sentiment of the people most
concerned is overwhelmingly opposed to the
transfer. Users of the National Forests;
experts in forestry in and out of the govern-
ment service; the great national agricultural
organizations and many others; the people of
the Rocky Mountain and Pacific coast states
and their representatives in Senate and House,
of both parties--all these are, in immense
majority, vigorously opposed to the transfer
and in favor of keeping the Service where it
1s.
Silcox did not believe that the
Forest Service could continue to succeed if
transferred to the Interior Department. I
understand that he gave you his reasons.
The transfer is not a question of
personalities, but of good permanent organiza-
tion. Secretaries pass; the natural relations
between lines of work do not. If Harold Ickes
were in Agriculture and Henry Wallace in Interior,
I would still be emphatically opposed to the pro-
posed transfer.
To uproot the Service from its life-
long surroundings would do great injury to its
morale, to its essential cooperation with other
agricultural bureaus, to its relations with the
users of the National Forests, and to public
support. Only the strongest constructive reasons
could justify it. So far as I know, such reasons
do not exist.
It strikes me as particularly unfor-
tunate that conservation should become a con-
troversial issue just at this time when I believe
it can be made the foundation of enduring peace
The President
January 17, 1940.
--3--
hetween nations. This is what I have wanted
to see you about. I enclose 8. memorandum on
the subject.
and
Faithfully your
Enclosure.
A PLAN FOR PERMANENT PEACE THROUGH INTERNATIONAL
COOPERATION IN THE CONSERVATION AND DISTRIBUTION
OF NATURAL RESOURCES
The Proposal
National life everywhere is built on the
foundation of natural resources. Throughout
human history the exhaustion of these resources
and the need for new supplies have been among
the greatest causes of war.
A just and permanent world peace is vital to
the best interests of the United States. When the
terms which will end the present war are considered,
the United States should be in position to point
the way to such a peace. That being so, it would
be wise to prepare in time.
The proposal is that the United States make
ready now to bring the nations together, at the
right moment, in a common effort for conserving
the natural resources of the earth, and for assur-
ing to each nation access to the raw materials it
needs, without recourse to war.
--2--
In all countries some natural resources are
being depleted or destroyed. Needless waste or
destruction of such resources anywhere threatens or
will threaten, sooner or later, the welfare and
security of peoples everywhere. Conservation is
clearly a world necessity, not only for enduring
prosperity, but also for permanent peace.
No nation is self-sufficient in essential raw
materials. The welfare of every nation depends on
access to natural resources which it lacks. Fair
access to natural resources from other nations is
therefore an indispensable condition of permanent
peace.
War is still an instrument of national policy
for the safeguarding of natural resources or for
securing them from other nations. Hence inter-
national cooperation in conserving, utilizing, and
distributing natural resources to the mutual advan-
tage of all nations might well remove one of the
most dangerous of all obstacles to a just and
permanent world peace.
--3--
The conservation of natural resources and fair
access to needed ráw materials are steps toward
the common good to which all nations must in prin-
ciple agree. Since the United States is less
dependent on imported natural resources than any
other industrial nation, and since it 1a already
engaged in broadening international trade through
negotiated agreements, its initiative to such ends
would undoubtedly be well received.
It is eminently fitting that the present
Administration, which so vigorously supports both
the conservation policy at home and the policy of
fair access to raw materials abroad, should take
the lead in this matter.
The problem of permanent peace includes, of
course, great factors which the foregoing proposal
does not cover. But it does cover that factor
which 1s certainly, in the long run, the most potent
of them all.
--4--
Facts Required
If the foregoing proposal is adopted, facts
in support of it will be needed, and a plan for
assembling them. The formulation of a general
policy and a specific program of action would
follow.
Facts for the United States and for each
nation separately should be grouped under the gen-
eral classes of Forests, Waters, Lands, Minerals,
and Wildlife. In rough outline they should include:
As to Conservation:
1. Resources in existence, consumption, prob-
able duration, waste, conservation if any, necessary
reserves, and available surplus.
2. The foregoing figures segregated for cer-
tain key resources, such as arable land, oil, tim-
ber, water power, cotton, rubber, coal, tin, iron,
copper, etc.
3. The relative consumption of natural
resources in war and peace.
--5--
4. A combination of these figures for the
whole World, and separately for the Americas,
Europe, Asia, the British Empire, and the French
Empire.
As to Fair Access:
1. Present interdependence of Nations in
natural resources (raw materials), with the ori-
gin, destination, and quantities of imports and
exports.
2. Present barriers to Fair Access, such 8.8
tariffs, embargoes, monopolies, military require-
ments, transportation.
3. Sources of pressure to acquire natural
resources, such 8.3 excess population, desire for
power, mental invasion, racial colonies, and
nationalism on the march.
--6--
A Way to Assemble Them
The information just outlined undoubtedly
exists in sufficient detail for the present pur-
pose, and can be put together without original
investigation. That could be done through:
1. A board, say of three persons attached
directly to the White House, with one or two
capable assistants, two or three stenographers,
and the necessary office space. This force might
have to be increased if available time proved
shorter and the cooperation of other agencies less
effective than is anticipated.
2. A Presidential order directing all Govern-
ment organizations to cooperate and supply desired
information and assistance on request of the Board.
3. Funds for salaries and expenses of the
Board members and their assistants. On the basis
of one year's work the cost should not exceed
$50,000.
--7--
Formulation by the Board of recommendations
for a general policy and a specific program of
action--including the presentation of the plan to
neutral and belligerent nations, the sequence and
the timing--could not wisely be undertaken without
the fullest cooperation and guidance of the Secre-
tary of State. It could best be undertaken after
facts enough to support it have been collected.
At a time and under circumstances which are
not here suggested, the plan should be announced
to the American people and fully discussed in pub-
lic, with special care to show that the interests
of Labor, Capital, and the Farmer have all been
duly recognized.
--8--
Previous Efforts
The idea of international cooperation in the
conservation and distribution of natural resources
the world over as a promoter of human welfare and
a preventer of war is not new. Early in 1909 a
North American Conservation Conference met in
Washington by invitation of President Theodore
Roosevelt. Upon the recommendation of this Con-
ference the President invited 58 nations to meet
at The Hague for the purpose of formulating plans
for an inventory of the natural resources of the
world. This was to have been followed by further
steps in the direction of permanent world peace,
but after 30 nations had accepted the invitation
of the United States, President Taft killed the
plan.
At the end of the World War President Wilson,
at the suggestion of Colonel House, took steps
toward securing world-wide cooperation in the con-
servation and distribution of natural resources.
--9--
Unfortunately nothing came of it beyond the initia-
tion of an inquiry under the League of Nations.
During President Hoover's Administration a
group of nearly two hundred leading citizens urged
him to take action along the same general line.
Nothing came of that either.
There is a strong reason to believe that what
other Presidents refused to try or failed to
achieve can now be undertaken with every prospect
of ultimate success.
Jan 17.1940.
Adolth Bert
Int
TSF
OF
THE FREE IRIOR
THE with SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
fee.
Tnkn
WASHINGTON
O
February 2, 1940.
THE FEB WHITE 6 RECEIVED 8 HOUSE 58 -
ASSISTANT
My dear Mr. President:
FEB 1040 STATE
MR. BERLE
I spoke to you briefly the other day about appointing delegates
to the Indian Conference in Mexico next April to represent this
country. Since then I have been informed that, although the Depart-
ment of State had promised to submit to us all names before passing
them on to you, this is not being done. I do not personally attest
to the fact, but my further information is that Mr. Berle has taken
over the handling of this matter, in the doing of which apparently
he does not propose either to consult or to take this Department into
consideration.
So far as I know, there is no agency of the United States Govern-
ment that has as much interest or concern as does Interior for our
Indian citizens. While technically, because of its international
phases, this is a matter that should be cleared through the Depart-
ment of State, it seems to me that it is essentially a matter for this
Department. We hope that delegates will be appointed to this conference
who have the technical knowledge and social vision requisite to dis-
cuss intelligently our own Indian policy, and the enormous progress
that has been made in all matters affecting the Indians under your
Administration. There will be in attendance at this conference repre-
sentatives of countries such as Mexico, the majority of whose citizens
are of Indian blood. Surely we want to make the best showing possible
and this can be done only if leadership is vested in this Department
through its Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Sincerely yours,
Horold
Secretary of the Interior.
The President,
The White House.
2
February fillesmat 10, 1940
gakes
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
ASSISTANT SECRETARY
MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT.
Re Secretary Ickes' Letter: Fear Lest the
State Department Interfere with the Indian
Conference in Mexico City
I have taken this up with Secretary Ickes. Why in
Gehenna anybody here should want to monkey with the
Conference on Indian Affairs is past my comprehension.
I have nothing to do with it, except that the Division
of Conferences, pro forma, reports to me.
I have suggested to the Secretary that he will
get straighter "information" if he telephones direct,
instead of picking up town gossip. He seemed satisfied
in talking to me; but he has a suspicious Department.
The suggested list of delegates will come over,
in due course.
GRB
A. A. Berle, Jr.
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
February 6, 1940.
MEMORANDUM FOR
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
TO READ FOR YOUR AMUSEMENT
AND RETURN FOR MY FILES.
F. D. R.
PSF 1990
EORGE W. NORRIS
Ickes
NEBRASKA
United States Senate
WASHINGTON, D.C.
N/K
January 25, 1940
My dear Mr. President:
I an very sorry to learn that you have changed your
mind and have decided to issue an order transferring the
Forest Service from the Department of Agriculture to the
Department of the Interior.
I shall not go into details, because at the con-
ference which we recently held I expressed quite fully my
ideas on the subject. I want to make one last suggestion
and that is that the entire matter might be settled satis-
factorily by making Mr. Ickes Secretary of War,
I appreciate the fact that Mr. Ickes' real inter-
est is in conservation. In the War Department, he would
have a wonderful opportunity to do a real service in
carrying out your ideas of conservation. He possesses
the peculiar qualities that fit him admirably for this
work, and as I have pointed out to you several times the
War Department through some of its agencies has not been in
harmony with your own policy of conservation. As I see it,
there is no other person who could more satisfactorily per-
form this job than Mr. Ickes.
Sincerely yours,
The Honorable
Franklin D. Roosevelt
President of the United States
The White House.
PSF Icke
ol.
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
February 6, 1940.
MEMORANDUM FOR
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
TO READ FOR YOUR AMUSEMENT
AND RETURN FOR MY FILES.
F. D. R.
Letter addressed to the President
under date of January 25, 1940 by
Senator Norris in re transfer of
Forest Service from the Department
of Agriculture. Makes the suggestion
that the matter might be settled
satisfactorily by making Mr. Ickes
Secretary of War.
PSF: 1940: I ckes
8Feb. 40
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
My dear an President:
you are a hard man to
deal with, especially when
any one advice and loves
you ps & do, your tether quit
touched me. 9 our yours to
commond to the efter of
very ability; of my lemotions
there can he no doubt
However, in all sincerely,
9 believe that the Flank
attack M Fountry that &
suggested yesterday is
the proper affroach at this
time. you connot offord
the beater on This issue
and 9 one affrehensive
Least of all would I want
to be every advertly re-
spousible for your defeat,
with deep affections,
Prby. 8,1440, Honold
PSF I.bs
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
February 8, 1940.
MEMORANDUM FOR
F. D. R.
On receipt of the attached,
I wrote longhand a memorandum
to H. L. I. and gave it to him.
MEMORANDUM FOR
H. L. I.
You and I have been married
"for better or worse" for too
long to get a divorce or for you
to break up the home. I continue
to need you.
Affectionately,
F.D.R.
PSF Ickes
OF THE
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
WASHINGTON
February 7, 1940.
Dear Misey:
Late yesterday afternoon General Watson called me to
summon me to a conference with the President and the Di-
rector of the Budget at 3:15 this afternoon, to consider
another draft of the order and message transferring
Forestry to Interior.
I trust that you will find it possible to get the
enclosed letter into the President's hands this morning,
because he will see from this that there will be no oc-
casion for the conference that he has called for this
afternoon. I want to spare him as much time and trouble
as possible.
Yours, as always,
Horold 7.9chr
Miss Marguerite LeHand,
Secretary to the President,
The White House.
Inc.
PSF Ickes
THE OF FINTE RIOR
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
WASHINGTON
February 7, 1940.
My dear Mr. President:
I had a long talk with George Norris on Monday about Forestry.
I found that he has no objection to transferring Forestry to In-
terior, per se. He does not think that Agriculture has any greater
claim on Forestry than Interior has. He volunteered that every Sec-
retary of the Interior might not personally be a scoundrel any more
than that every Secretary of Agriculture might be a man of out-
standing rectitude and civic virtue. He said that if your order
had gone up some time ago it would probably have caused little
disturbance. He feels that to send it up now would bring out in
the open a fight that is already smouldering and that it would affect
adversely your chances for re-election. He said to me that he had
already told you that he regarded your election for a third term
as of paramount importance.
As you know, I agree with Senator Norris as to this. No more
than Senator Norris would I want to urge or be a party to any act
on your part that might make it more difficult for you to be re-
elected if the people should decide that it was your duty to them
to run again.
Moreover, I have a feeling that, as matters have developed
with respect to Forestry, it will now mean a hard fight to
transfer it. It could have been done easily at the last session.
It could have been done without much trouble if the order had gone
up, as we had planned, upon the convening of Congress for this
session without any prior intimation that such an order was in
prospect. But already protests by the hundreds, stimulated un-
doubtedly by Gifford Pinchot and the well-organized Forest lobby,
are pouring in upon individual members of Congress. Word has
just come to me from one Congressman that he has received a
letter from Pinchot containing this language:
"The Interior Department has no claim whatever upon the national
forests. Ambition for power is no good reason for upsetting a lay-
out that works superbly as it 1s."
The result is that, whereas last spring I felt every assurance
that there would be no difficulty in transferring Forestry, and
while I believed the same at the beginning of this session, I no
longer possess any degree of confidence. Accordingly, I cannot
conscientiously ask that you transfer Forestry.
However, unfortunately, Forestry has become a symbol to me.
I have had one consistent ambition since I have been Secretary
of the Interior, and that has been to be the head of a Department
of Conservation, of which, necessarily, Forestry would be the key-
stone. I have not wanted merely to be a Secretary of the Interior;
I have wanted to leave office with the satisfaction that I had
accomplished something real and fundamental. I have told you
2
frankly that, as this Department is now set up, it does not interest
me.
So I have come to the reluctant conclusion that, as matters now
stand, I cannot be true to myself nor measure up to the high stand-
ards that you have a right to expect of a man whom you have honored
by making him a member of your Cabinet. Accordingly, I am resign-
ing as Secretary of the Interior and, at your pleasure, I would
like my resignation to take effect not later than the 29th of
February.
You have highly honored me by naming and retaining me as a
member of your Cabinet for practically seven years. Until last
July 1, I thoroughly enjoyed my work. Although I now feel that
I cannot go on, I want you to know how much I appreciate the
many expressions of regard and confidence that I have had from
you and what an inspiration it has been to work in such close
cooperation with the man whom I regard as the outstanding statesman
of his generation.
Sincerely yours,
Secretary of the Interior.
The President,
The White House.
3
PSF I.kes
C
0
P
Y
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
March 7. 1940.
MEMORANDUM FOR
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
Will you speak to me about this?
F.D.R.
Smare
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
can
WASHINGTON
Original filedin PSF Agriculture
[3-9-40]
The President
The White House.
My dear Mr. President:
I have received your memorandum of March 7, transmitting Sec-
retary Wallace's letter of March 4 concerning recreation in the na-
tional forests, which I an returning herewith.
Understated in Secretary Wallace's letter is the fact that the
Forest Service is administering 73 primitive areas set aside by or-
der of the Chief Forester as "preserving for all time to come, for
the purpose of public education, inspiration and recreation, with
such restrictions as have been found necessary These primi-
tive areas total 14,268,705 acres. The Forest Service also has de-
veloped a number of major recreational areas, notably Mount Baker
National Forest Park, Washington; Columbia River Gorge and Mount
Hood, Oregon; the area recently created as the Kings Canyon National
Park, California; and the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
Specifically, the major recreational development in Kings Can-
yon still remains in the national forest outside of the park bound-
aries in the Cedar Grove reclamation withdrawal. The Cedar Grove
development consists of 7 miles of one-way, 10 foot, campground
service roads, all of which are oiled. There are 2 public camp-
grounds totalling 45 acres and covering 197 individual sites. These
are complete, with parking spurs, campfire stoves, tables, piped
water, flush type toilets and septic tanks. A third campground unit
of approximately 55 acres and covering about 160 individual camp
sites is partially completed. Unless this recently constructed rec-
reational development is transferred to the National Park Service,
there will be two departments administering recreation for the same
park.
The Soil Conservation Service of the Department of Agriculture
has developed numerous important recreational projects, generally
without consultation with State park authorities or with the National
Park Service, and these recreational developments conflict in a num-
ber of cases with developments that the latter Service is carrying
out in cooperation with the States.
Over emphasized in Secretary Wallace's letter is the incidental
recreational use of minor campgrounds and pionic grounds, which range
in size from 8 to 10 sets of fireplaces and tables to the occasionally
large area of 50 to 75 sets. I am not concerned with this incidental
recreational use of the national forests. I believe that such inoi-
dental use should be continued under the direct supervision of the
Forest Service, but that the function of recreational land planning,
to avoid duplication of effort and competition with other Federal
and State recreational developments, should be transferred to the Do-
partment of the Interior so that a coordinated park, parkway and rec-
reational program can be carried out, as directed by the Congress.
I believe, also, that most of the designated primitive and reo-
reational areas, the primary purpose of which is for recreation and
preservation, should be transferred to this Department. Such areas
could continue to be open to hunting, prospecting and mining, and
other non-destructive uses. If such transfer is consummated, the
widespread, incidental recreational use of the forests, which Seo-
retary Wallace logically holds to be a legitimate use, would still
remain undisturbed under the administration of the Forest Service.
With reference to his conclusion that such transfer would result
in duplication of personnel at various levels and greatly increased
cost of administration, it is observed that protection and administra-
tion of large primitive areas is generally based on physical limita-
tions of personnel to patrol and to protect. Furthermore, most of
the primitive areas are at higher elevations and require less pro-
tection than the lowlands.
Until funds and personnel can be adjusted authority is contained
in the National Park Service Organic Aot of 1916 for the Secretary of
Agriculture to cooperate with that Service to such extent as may be
requested by the Secretary of the Interior in the supervision, man-
agement, and control of national monuments contiguous to national for-
ests. Such cooperation could be followed also in connection with the
primitive and recreational areas, if transferred to this Department.
Concerning construction and maintenance of trails, the cost is
limited by physical conditions. There is no reason to believe that
construction and maintenance will cost more under the supervision of
the National Park Service than under the supervision of the Forest
Service.
2
There are repeated implications in Secretary Wallace's letter
that management of recreational lands by any agency other than the
Forest Service would result in prohibitive cost of recreation for low
income groups. This argument is directed at the reasonable special
service fees and automobile fees which the National Park Service
charges in accordance with your wishes and the requirements of the
Bureau of the Budget and the Congress. There appears to be very
little reason why the Department of Agriculture should be permitted
to break down this revenue producing practice by providing a competing
system of so-called free recreation.
The map, which Secretary Wallace attached, shows the multiple use
plan of management for the Wenatchee National Forest, a typical national
forest. I have no thought of recommending the transfer of any portion
of it. It is an ordinary national forest with its well distributed
incidental, recreational use. It does have one point of interest, how-
ever, and that is that only about 35 percent of it is useful for timber
production, and the remaining two-thirds of it hardly can be classified
as "forestry" land.
It is the opinion of many foresters that, if the Forest Service
were liberated from the problems of recreational area administration,
the energies of that great organization would be turned to the legiti-
mate function of forestry.
Because of these considerations, I recommend that those national
forest lands which, in reality, serve as parks, be transferred to the
Department of the Interior, and that the recreational land planning of
the Federal Government also be concentrated in this Department. This
can be accomplished without disturbing the normal and desirable rec-
reational use of timber producing lands and without detracting from the
national sustained yield timber program. There is no reason to believe
that such transfer would increase present administrative costs in any
particular. To the contrary, present duplication and conflict point
conclusively to savings to be attained by substituting coordination
for conflict.
Sincerely yours,
Secretary of the Interior.
Enclosure 1936829.
aed ilm
FILE COPY
Surname:
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
WASHINGTON
Sungray
Milar
TO SECRETARY
MAR 15 1940
FOR SIGNATURE
The President
INTERIOR DEPT.
The White House.
MAR 1 5 1940 My dear Mr. Presidents
MAIL SECRETARY'S CENTER
I have received your memorandum of Harch 7. transmitting Seo-
retary Wallace's letter of March 4 concerning recreation in the na-
tional forests, which X an returning herewith.
Understated in Secretary Wallace's letter is the fact that the
MAR 16 194@orest Service is administering 73 primitive aroas set aside by or
BECRETARY
der of the Chief Forester as "preserving for all time to come, for
the purpose of public education, inspiration and recreation, with
INTERIOR RECEIVED DEPT.
such restrictions as have been found necessary . . .". These primi-
tive areas total 14,268,705 acros. The Forest Service also has de-
MAR 1 8 1940
veloped a number of major recreational areas, notably Mount Baker
SECRETARY'S MAIL CENTER
National Forest Park, Washington, Columbia River Gorge and Mount
Hood, Oregons the area recently created as the Kings Canyon National
INTERIOR RECEIVED DEPT.
Park, California; and the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
MAR 1 8 1940
FIRST ASSISTANT
Specifically, the major recreational development in Kings Can-
SECRETARY
you still remains in the national forest outside of the park bound-
aries in the Cedar Grove reelamation withdrawal. The Codar Grove
development consists of 7 milos of one-ways 10 foot, campground
service roads, all of which are ciled. There are 2 public camp-
grounds totalling 45 acres and covering 197 individual sites. These
are complete, with parking spurs, compfire stoves, tables, piped
water, flush type toilets and septie tanks. A third campground unit
of approximately 55 acros and covering about 160 individual camp
sites is partially completed. Unless this recently constructed reo-
reational development is transferred to the National Park Service,
there will be two departments administering recreation for the same
park.
The Soil Conservation Service of the Department of Agriculture
has developed numerous important recreational projects, generally
without consultation with State park authorities or with the National
Park Service, and these recreational developments conflict in a num-
ber of cases with developments that the latter Service is carrying
out in cooperation with the States.
Copy for Secretary's Office
Over emphasised in Secretary Wallnce's letter is the incidental
recreational use of minor campgrounds and pienic grounds, which range
in size from 8 to 10 sets of fireplaces and tables to the occasionally
large area of 50 to 75 sets. I an not concerned with this incidental
recreational use of the national forests. I believe that such inoi-
dental use should be continued under the direct supervision of the
Forest Service, but that the function of recreational land planning,
to avoid duplication of effort and competition with other Federal
and State recreational developments, should be transferred to the De-
partment of the Interior so that a coordinated park, parkway and roo-
reational program can be carried out, as directed by the Congress.
I believe, also, that most of the designated primitive and reo-
reational areas, the primary purpose of which is for recreation and
preservation, should be transferred to this Department. Such areas
could continue to be open to hunting, prospecting and mining, and
other non-destructive uses. If such transfer is consumnated, the
widespread, incidental recreational use of the forests, which Sec-
retary Wallace logically holds to be a legitimate use, would still
remain undisturbed under the administration of the Forest Service.
With reference to his conclusion that such transfer would result
in duplication of personnel at various levels and greatly increased
cost of administration, it is observed that protection and administra-
tion of large primitive areas is generally based on physical limita-
tions of personnel to patrol and to protect. Furthermore, most of
the primitive aroas are at higher elevations and require less pro-
tection than the lowlands.
Until funds and personnel can be adjusted authority is contained
in the National Park Service Organic Act of 1916 for the Secretary of
Agriculture to cooperate with that Service to such extent as may be
requested by the Secretary of the Interior in the supervision, nan-
agement, and control of national monuments contiguous to national for-
ests. Such cooperation could be followed also in connection with the
primitive and recreational areas, if transferred to this Department.
Concerning construction and maintenance of trails, the cost is
limited by physical conditions. There is no reason to believe that
construction and maintenance will cost more under the supervision of
the National Park Service than under the supervision of the Forest
Service.
2
There are repeated implications in Secretary Wallace's letter
that management of recreational lands by any agency other than the
Forest Service would result in prohibitive cost of recreation for low
income groups. This argument is directed at the reasonable special
service fees and automobile fees which the National Park Service
charges in accordance with your wishes and the requirements of the
Bureau of the Budget and the Congress. There appears to be very
little reason why the Department of Agriculture should be permitted
to break down this revenue producing practice by providing a competing
system of se-called free recreation.
The map, which Secretary Wallace attached, shows the multiple use
plan of management for the Wanatchee National Forest, a typical national
forest. I have no thought of recommending the transfer of any portion
of it. It is an ordinary national forest with its well distributed
incidental, recreational use. It does have one point of interest, how-
over, and that is that only about 35 percent of it is useful for timber
production, and the remaining two-thirds of it hardly can be classified
as "forestry" lands
It is the opinion of many foresters that, if the Porest Service
were liberated from the problems of recreational area administration,
the energies of that great organisation would be turned to the legiti-
mate function of forestry.
Because of these considerations, I recommend that those national
forest lands which, in reality, serve as parks, be transferred to the
Department of the Interior, and that the recreational land planning of
the Federal Government also be concentrated in this Department. This
can be accomplished without disturbing the normal and desirable rec-
reational use of timber producing lands and without detracting from the
national sustained yield timber program. There is no reason to believe
that such transfer would increase present administrative costs in any
particular. To the contrary, present duplication and conflict point
conclusively to savings to be attained by substituting coordination
for conflict.
Sincerely yours,
Secretary of the Interior.
Enclosure 1936829.
aed:lm
PsF Interior
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
WASHINGTON
[3-15-40]
The President
The White House.
My dear Mr. Presidents
I have received your memorandum of March 7. transmitting Sec-
retary Wallace's letter of March 4 concerning recreation in the na-
tional forests, which I an returning herewith.
Understated in Secretary Wallace's letter is the fact that the
Forest Service is administering 73 primitive areas set aside by or-
der of the Chief Forester as "preserving for all time to come, for
the purpose of public education, inspiration and recreation, with
such restrictions as have been found necessary ⑇. These primi-
tive areas total 14,268,705 acros. The Forest Service also has de-
veloped a number of major recreational areas, notably Mount Baker
National Forest Park, Washingtons Columbia River Gorge and Mount
Hood, Oregons the area recently created as the Kings Canyon National
Park, California; and the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
Specifically, the major recreational development in Kings Can-
you still remains in the national forest outside of the park bound-
aries in the Cedar Grove reclamation withdrawal. The Cedar Grove
development consists of 7 miles of one-way, 10 foot, campground
service roads, all of which are ciled. There are 2 public camp-
grounds totalling 45 aores and covering 197 individual sites. These
are complete, with parking spurs, campfire stoves, tables, piped
water, flush type toilets and septio tanks. A third campground unit
of approximately 55 acres and covering about 160 individual camp
sites is partially completed. Unless this recently constructed reo-
reational development is transferred to the National Park Service,
there will be two departments administering recreation for the same
park.
The Soil Conservation Service of the Department of Agriculture
has developed numerous important recreational projects, generally
without consultation with State park authorities or with the National
Park Service, and these recreational developments conflict in a num-
ber of cases with developments that the latter Service is carrying
out in cooperation with the States.
Over emphasised in Secretary Wallace's letter is the incidental
recreational use of minor campgrounds and pienie grounds, which range
in size from 8 to 10 sets of fireplaces and tables to the occasionally
large area of 50 to 75 sets. I an not concerned with this incidental
recreational use of the national forests. I believe that such inci-
dental use should be continued under the direct supervision of the
Forest Service, but that the function of recreational land planning,
to avoid duplication of effort and competition with other Federal
and State recreational developments, should be transferred to the De-
partment of the Interior so that a coordinated park, parkway and rec-
reational program can be carried out, as directed by the Congress.
I believe, also, that most of the designated primitive and rec-
reational areas, the primary purpose of which is for recreation and
preservation, should be transferred to this Department. Such areas
could continue to be open to hunting, prospecting and mining, and
other non-destructive uses. If such transfer is consumnated, the
widespread, incidental recreational use of the forests, which Sec-
retary Wallace logically holds to be a legitimate use, would still
remain undisturbed under the administration of the Forest Service.
With reference to his conclusion that such transfer would result
in duplication of personnel at various levels and greatly increased
cost of administration, it is observed that protection and administra-
tion of large primitive areas is generally based on physical limita-
tions of personnel to patrol and to protect. Furthermore, most of
the primitive areas are at higher elevations and require less pro-
tection than the lowlands.
Until funds and personnel can be adjusted authority is contained
in the National Park Service Organic Act of 1916 for the Secretary of
Agriculture to cooperate with that Service to such extent as may be
requested by the Secretary of the Interior in the supervision, man-
agement, and control of national monuments contiguous to national for-
ests. Such ocoperation could be followed also in connection with the
primitive and recreational areas, if transferred to this Department.
Concerning construction and maintenance of trails, the cost is
limited by physical conditions. There is no reason to believe that
construction and maintenance will cost more under the supervision of
the National Park Service than under the supervision of the Forest
Service.
2
There are repeated implications in Secretary Wallace's letter
that management of recreational lands by any agency other than the
Forest Service would result in prohibitive cost of recreation for low
income groups. This argument is directed at the reasonable special
service fees and automobile fees which the National Park Service
charges in accordance with your wishes and the requirements of the
Bureau of the Budget and the Congress. There appears to be very
little reason why the Department of Agriculture should be permitted
to break down this revenue producing practice by providing a competing
system of se-called free recreation.
The map, which Secretary Wallace attached, shows the multiple use
plan of management for the Wenatchee National Forest, a typical national
forest. I have no thought of recommending the transfer of any portion
of it. It is an ordinary national forest with its well distributed
incidental, recreational use. It does have one point of interest, how-
over, and that is that only about 35 percent of it is useful for timber
production, and the remaining two-thirds of it hardly can be classified
as "forestry" land.
It is the opinion of many foresters that, if the Forest Service
were liberated from the problems of recreational area administration,
the energies of that great organization would be turned to the legiti-
mate function of forestry.
Because of these considerations, I recommend that those national
forest lands which, in reality, serve as parks, be trensferred to the
Department of the Interior, and that the recreational land planning of
the Federal Government also be concentrated in this Department. This
can be accomplished without disturbing the normal and desirable reo-
reational use of timber producing lands and without detracting from the
national sustained yield timber program. There is no reason to believe
that such transfer would increase present administrative costs in any
particular. To the contrary, present duplication and conflict point
conclusively to savings to be attained by substituting coordination
for conflict.
Sincerely yours,
Secretary of the Interior.
Enolosure 1936829.
P
PsF Interior
Y
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
WASHINGTON
March 4. 1940.
The President,
The White House.
Dear Mr. Presidents
As a follow-up of our talk about National Forest recreation
on February 13, I thought you would like to have thefollowing
brief statement:
The recreational use of the National Forests began before
there was any provision for handling it. The advent of the auto-
mobile brought sharply increased use, creating problems of fire
protection and sanitation which had to be met.
The great area and distribution of the National Forests -
175 million acres not in 40 States and two Territories, inevitably
makes them important locally, regionally, and nationally in varying
degrees as recreational outlets. This inespecially true in the
West where the National Forests contain the bulk of the higher
mountain territory, furnishing escape from the hot lowlands in the
summer and the larger part of the winter sports opportunity in the
winter.
Both because the people in large numbers use these areas for
recreation on their own invitation and because such use is regarded
by the Department as highly desirable, the recreational opportunity
has been recognised as one of the important resources of the National
Forests and has been given its appropriate place in the pattern of
management and use.
Recreation use fits nicely into the multiple use plan of
management. Much of it is so dispersed in character that it requires
nothing but the opportunity to roam around over lands which are at
the same time growing timber and forage, furnishing water and wildlife,
and in other ways contributing various public benefits. The more con-
centrated form, such as camping and pionicking, requires only a small
total area of actual use, though the use spots themselves are scattered
throughout the National Forests. Campgrounds and pionio grounds are
usually small, varying from 8 or 10 sets of fireplaces and tables to
the occasional large area providing 50 to 75 sets.
It is necessary to give recreation the right of way only over
limited areas such as camp and picnic grounds, lake shores, resort
areas, and the like. In such situations, commercial use of the timber
and other resources is denied because of the greater recreational or
scenic value. Reservation is made of "natural areas" of virgin timber
here ahd there for visitors to enjoy.
The wilderness and wild areas comrpise the only large tracts
primarily devoted to recreation. These are pieces of the"back country,"
usually low in economic value, which are reserved from the encroachment
of roads and similar artificialities for the enjoyment of those who like
the primitive. These areas are situated in the hinterland of the Na-
tional Forests and the administrators of the adjoining National Forest
land can give them the necessary protection and simple administration
with the minimum of expense.
Recreation use has increased steadily and measurably. Estimates
indicate that in 1924 there were about 42 million visits to the National
Forests by people who camped, picnicked, stayed at resorts, or other-
wise made actual use of the recreational facilities. In 1938, this
number had increased to 142 million. In addition to this actual use
of recreational facilities in 1938, there were over 18 million other visits
by persons who took their recreation in traveling National Forests roads
to enjoy the outdoor scenery. This total estimated figure of 32-3/4
million visits compares with a little over 164 million for the National
Parks, monuments, and historical areas for the same year.
In 1938, 75 per cent of those who actually used facilities were
campers and picnickers; about 20 per cent stayed at resorts. Among the
remaining 5 per cent are those who used summer homes in the Forests as
owners or guests.
Of the foregoing, our best estimate is that about 8 per cent
came primarily for hunting, 21 per cent for fishing, 9 per cent for
winter sports, and the remaining 62 per cent primeipally just to get
out into the woods.
National Forest recreational use is essentially a use by people
of low or moderate income who in the main live near enough to be able
to get to the National Forests cheaply and who must enjoy them at low
expense when they get there. This is reflected in one way in the large
numbers of campers and picnickers. Another striking bit of evidence
is the result of a cross section taken in 1937 of the users of camp
and picnic grounds as to their annual income classification. This shows
as follows:
2
Income of Camp and Picnic Users - 1937
Income Group
Per Cent
Under $1000
28
$1000 to $2000
43
$2000 to $3000
19
$3000 to $5000
7
Over $5000
3
100
The facilities installed on the National Forests are mostly
of a simple character designed primarily to meet the needs of the
average citizen. Thus, there are nearly 4000 camp and picnic grounds;
about 800 permitted resorts, mostly moderate priced; many places where
winter sports may be enjoyed by those who can afford nothing more than
a pair of skis and the cost of a short drive to the mountains. lie are
now installing so-called organization camps for low rental to charitable
or civic groups who subsidize vacations for the underprivileged.
General public use is always given the right of way in planning
and installing facilities. Exclusive use, such as summer homes, is
allowed only where areas are not needed for general use. There are
only about 13,000 summer homes in all of the National Forests, each
one occupying a lot averaging less than an acre in size.
When a block of summer-home lots is laid out, publicity is
given and permits are granted on a first-come first-served basis.
Most summer homes are modest affairs costing not over $1000. More
elaborate homes are the exception.
Timberline Lodge on Mount Hood, which you visited, is an ex-
ceptional development. It was built by the WPA and on a scale which
wouldnot have been undertaken except through the availability of
relief labor. Its significance, however, lies not in the beauty of
building and its furnishings nor in the few rooms used by the higher-
paying guests, but rather in the fact that it is the rallying point
in the use of Mount Hood by scores of thousands of people from nearby
communities for winter sports which they must find near at hand
cheaply or forego them.
The administration of National Forest recreation is just a part
of the entire administrative job. The men who give it general super-
vision - the Regional Foresters and Supervisors - are the same men who
supervise all of the other uses. The district rangers who supervise
the heavy week-end business, and the lighter use through the week, are
the same men who are handling the timber sale business, the fire pro-
tection, the supervision of grazinguse, the issuing of permits for
all sorts of miscellaneous uses, and all the other things that go
along with the multiple use plan of management.
3
Furthermore, the actual use itself must always be fitted into
the other uses in a way which can be done only by the general overseer.
The enclosed map of the Wenatchee National Forest, showing the general
multiple use pattern, gives an idea of the way recreation has to be
fitted into that pattern.
These considerations seems to me to point conclusively to the
fact that it would be virtually impossible to turn over the recreation
job to another agency. It would cause conflicts in purpose and in
handling. It would require much duplication of personnel at various
levels and a greatly increased cost. Beyond this, and without drawing
invidious comparisons, I am satisfied that it would cause much public
discontent, for there is ample proof that the people who use the
National Forests for recreation are very much wedded to the way in
which it is now handled.
Sincerely yours,
(SGD) H. A. WALLACE
Enclosure.
Secretary.
PSF
get
OF
STATE SINTE IRIOR
fill
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
Marll
Man
THE
lobes
WASHINGTON
March 9, 1940.
RECENCE = I 15 WHITE AM 3 HOUSE
My dear Mr. President:
When I got back to my office after Cabinet on Friday, I found
two communications from the Department of Agriculture to you, each
carrying the notation "Yill you speak to me about this" over your
initials.
One of these communications has to do with the proposal to trans-
fer to this Department the recreational activities of the Forest
Service and the other relates to the proposed transfer to the Grazing
Division of Interior of the grazing in the national forests. In view
of my trip to California, I cannot take these matters up with you
until my return which will be on March 17. In the meantime, I am
having detailed replies prepared for my consideration.
In preliminary fashion I may say that it was hardly to be expected
that Agriculture would willingly yield to your suggestion in this or
in any other matter. Of course these questions can be argued ad lib
and direful forebodings indulged in of the breakdown in the services
affected if transfers are made. It seems to me that it all gets down
to a question of whether similar services and activities are to be com-
bined in one department or whether they are to be divided among two or
more departments. I suppose now that Agriculture knows that modified
transfers from Agriculture to Interior are being considered, the good
old Forestry lobby will again go into high gear and deluge Congress
with jeremiads and lamentations, all tending to prove that the Federal
Government will crash about our ears if Agriculture is not to have what
it wants when it wants it. In this connection I recall that I was not
even given the benefit of clergy when the Soil Erosion Service, which
started under Interior and vas giving such a satisfactory account of it-
self, was transferred to Agriculture. I was actually at the Miami rail-
road station when a telephone call came through from my Department
apprising me that an order had been issued to Assistant Secretary Chap-
man (who had no authority in the matter) to agree to the transfer.
I pleaded that the matter be held open until the following morning but
when I reached my office early the following day, the Soil Erosion
Service had been gathered to the rapacious bosom of Agriculture. I was
not even given an opportunity to try to prove, as I believe, that to
repair and build up the soil, especially on the public lands, is at
least as much the concern of Interior as it is of Agriculture.
Agriculture lost little time in stretching its prehensile fingers
in the direction of the public domain wherever it could through the
activities of the Soil Erosion Service. A great deal of time and energy
is required to repel the unholy advances of Agriculture. I may remind
you in passing that the Soil Erosion Service was transferred to Agri-
culture over the protests of Director Bennett of that Service.
Sometimes I think that it might be better to transfer all of
Interior to Agriculture and see whether that would suit the rapacious
2
appetite of this over-grown and bloated Department. On the basis of
size alone, an effort ought to be made to reduce Agriculture either by
logical transfers to Interior or by splitting the Department in two.
No man is able to oversee and administer efficiently this vast and varied
Department which now ranges from the Weather Bureau to operations in high
finance. In this connection the enclosed tabulation may be of interest.
I spoke to you after Cabinet on Friday about going ahead with the
transfer plans that we had been discussing in lieu of the transfer of
Forestry. I believe in short, quick operations myself when it comes to
transfers. The patient may be shocked as I was when I suffered a major
operation with respect to the Soil Erosion Service and actual dismember-
ment under Reorganization Plan No. 2. But even a complete shock is
preferable to lying on the operating table gazing at the instruments
while the internes and nurses debate what operation the surgeon will
perform and what instruments he will use,
Sincerely yours,
Secretary of the Interior.
The President,
The White House.
Enc.
3
Comparison between the Department of Agriculture and the
Department of the Interior as to appropriations, employees,
space occupied, and number of bureaus or subdivisions,
Fiscal Year 1940
March 8, 1940.
Interior
Agriculture
Square feet of space occupied
in D. C.
1,163,692
2,420,493
Appropriations for 1940:
General and special funds
$155,572,530.65
$1,141,345,967.11
Emergency Relief (direct appropri-
ations exclusive of amounts
transferred from WPA)
8,350,000.00
143,000,000.00
Total as carried in 1941
Budget
$163,922,530.65
$1,284,345,967.11
Number of positions as carried in
1940 column of estimate schedules
(exclusive of temporary positions
and CCC) :
Regular -
D. C.
6,051
12,733.7
Field
19,842
30,722.1
Emergency -
D.C.
111.9
973.9
Field
1,024.4
14,192
Total -
D.C.
6,162.9
13,707.6
Field
20,866.4
44,914.1
Grand Total
27,029.3
58,621.7
Number of employees as of December.
31, 1940, including emergency,
CCC, and temporary
46,648
86,262
Number of bureaus or major
subdivisions
10
26
PSF tIckes
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
Kuranegh
WASHINGTON
[Oriqual filed in PsF
Pomien
with related care spondence
of Wallace. Indexed There-MeB
March
The President,
3-9-40
The White House.
My dear Mr. President:
I have read Secretary Wallace's letter to you of March 2 with
a great deal of interest. After carefully considering all of the
points made by the Secretary I cannot escape from the idea that he
has failed to grasp the broad importance of the matter under dis-
cussion. It seems to me that under these circumstances it would be
entirely proper to present to you my concept of this problem and
how it can best be solved in the public's interest and under a. long-
time land use plan.
The act authorizing the establishment of the forest reserves
was for the primary and avowed purpose of protecting the Nation's
forest resources. Forest reserves, and later national forests,
were established pursuant to the Act of June 4, 1897 (30 Stat. 11,
34, 36) U.S.C. Title 16, Section 475. In that Act this significant
section occurs:
"No public forest reservation shall be established
except to improve and protect the forests within
the reservation, or for the purpose of securing
favorable conditions of water flows, and to effect
a continuous supply of timber for the use and
necessities of citizens of the United States; but
it is not the purpose or intent of these provisions,
or of the act providing for such reservations, to
authorize the inclusion therein of lands more valu-
able for the minerals therein or for agricultural
purposes than for forest purposes."
The original reservations and forests were largely of the type
contemplated under the law of 1897. In recent years the forests
have been extended to embrace large areas of land clearly outside
the purview of the act. These extensions of forest areas into the
open or sparsely timbered range lands of the West have aggregated
many millions of acres. These extensions, ostensibly made for water-
shed protection purposes when timber values were impossible to
defend, in general constituted an invasion of areas of primary
value for range purposes and the imposition of a timber or forest
economy that has often been inimical to grazing or range use, and
to the unbalancing of the local economy built and maintained by the
livestock industry. Grazing use by the livestock industry of lands
within forests has been permitted because denial of such use would
have resulted in widespread disturbance of social and economic con-
ditions in the western range areas. Such grazing use of the forests
under sufferance is contrasted with legal recognition of grazing
use on the Federal ranges under the Taylor Act. The security pro-
vided under the Taylor Act has such obvious advantages as to need
no defense. Such security is essential to stabilization of the
stock industry; the development of a sound economy in the range
territory and rehabilitation of the ranges.
Of the thousands of forest grasing users, only a small per-
centage is entirely dependent upon forest range for a livelihood.
The great majority use forest ranges for only limited seasons each
year. During the other seasons the stock are on private, leased,
or Federal range lands.
The ranges being administered under the Taylor Grasing Act
provide a part or all of the off-forest grasing by an estimated 75
percent of the forest users, while only approximately 25 percent
of the Federal range users are dependent in any degree upon the
national forests.
of the thousands of forest users, many receive permits for
only a portion of the stock they own and wish to graze. The Forest
Service restricts numbers of stock and grazing use in accordance
with climatic conditions and requires owners to find other ranges
for any additional numbers of stock or for all stock during seasons
or parts of seasons when climatic conditions are unfavorable.
Other lands, therefore, carry and have carried the burden of the
full numbers of stock owned. In the case of the Grazing Service,
the sise of permits or licenses truly reflects the actual size of
the operations of the permittees or licensees. The apparently
large number of small licensees or permittees using the national
forest ranges is not a true picture of the size of operations or
the classification of users as small or large.
The condition of forest ranges where they are admitted to be
in good condition is due largely to the forced use of public domain
and other range outside the national forests by stock that have
been excluded or those that are kept off until the Forest Service
decides that the forest range is ready for use.
2
Because of this restricted range policy of the Forest Service,
forest ranges have been protected at the expense of public and
private holdings and with little regard for the economic effect on
owners who, having the stock on hand, must necessarily graze them
somewhere while waiting to get onto the forests. This long estab-
lished policy of the Forest Service is in definite contrast with
that being followed by the Grazing Service for meeting the broad
social and economic problems in the range country. The Forest Ser-
vice is interested primarily in timber and forest products and such
related uses of forest lands that do not interfere with forest
growth. Forest administration has been directed along these lines
regardless of the effect on the livestock industry. They have per-
mitted vast areas of open range land to grow up into a jungle of
small reproduction, excluding grazing, and yet in many of these
same areas there is little or no opportunity ever to develop com-
mercial timber stands.
The cumulative effect of 35 years of this type of adminis-
tration is noticeable in hundreds of mountain valleys and rural
communities. Social and economic values have been sacrificed to
the growing of timber of no commercial worth and of no greater
watershed protection value than would have been furnished by 1
good stand of grass and browse, the use of which would have per-
mitted continuance of a livestock economy, production of taxes,
income, and a livelihood for many persons directly and all very
large number indirectly.
The Forest Service has in its past administration failed to
give due consideration to proper use of private as well as public
lands in its long-time planning. It has substituted an economy
based primarily on timber production for the one evolved by trial
and error methods of the western people over a long period of years.
The Forest Service alone among Federal agencies has heretofore
failed to indicate a desire to recognize the desirability or sig-
nificance of correlated management of all Federal lands and land
resources. This applies especially to grazing lands and the forage
resources. This attitude on the part of the Forest Service is in
strong contrast to that of other bureaus of the Government where
cooperative agreements have been executed authorizing the Grasing
Service of the Interior Department to administer lands or act as
a grazing adviser. Such agreements are in effect with the Soil
Conservation Service and the Farm Security Administration of the
Department of Agriculture, and with the Reclamation Service, the
Biological Survey, the National Park Service, the Indian Service
of the Department of the Interior, and even on areas under the
control of the War and Navy Departments. Furthermore, the Grasing
Service secured enactment of the Pierce Act which permits corre-
lated use of privately owned, State, and county lands without
affecting titles or tax rolls.
3
The Grazing Service of this Department, under the authority of
the Taylor Grazing Act, is engaged in the administration of approxi-
mately 134,000,000 acres of grazing land in 10 western States.
Interspersed with this area are upwards of 25,000,000 acres of
national forest lands, including entire "forests" in all number of
Instances, which are non-timbered grazing lands. In close associa-
tion with these areas are 40,000,000 to 45,000,000 acres more of
national forest land, the primary resource value of which is grazing.
The tree growth supported thereon of minor or insignificant value
as a source of commercial timber or a basis for operations that
would provide a livelihood for some of our citizens. This area
within grazing districts and forests of more than 200,000,000 acres
of public grazing land, together with nearly a like amount of pri-
vately owned farm, ranch, and range lands constitutes the backbone
of the livestock industry and the general economy of these western
States.
In my opinion the existing divided administration of the public
grasing land is productive of waste and inefficiency, in a large
measure is unsound and ineffective, and consequently is detrimental
to the public interest. The proposal of Secretary Wallace to con-
tinue with only slight modification, this method of administration
would provide but minor improvements at best, and would be unwork-
able in practice. The proposed situation would be comparable to
two families attempting to use the same household facilities. Con-
fusion and conflict would be inevitable.
This Department has given long and careful consideration to
the question of properly conserving or providing for orderly use
of the vast heritage embraced in our Federal lands and the resources
thereon. I know how interested you are in trying to effect and put
into action a long-time program of administration that will provide
the greatest possible benefit, not only to the lands and the resources,
but to the public that owns both and is entitled to an efficient and
proper administration thereof.
I believe that a unified administration of the public grazing land
is imperative to the accomplishment of your purpose. May I suggest,
therefore, that the first step toward accomplishing this most desir-
able objective would be to determine the primary values of the lands
in question and then to assign them to the respective agencies res-
ponsible for their proper administration. This would result in the
transfer from the forests, to the grazing districts, under Section 13
of the Taylor Act, of administratively manageable areas approximating
25,000,000 acres of open non-commercial timber land of primary value
for grasing purposes, and the transfer of any manageable units of
lands supporting commercial timber stands from the grazing districts
to the adjacent forests. For the remaining 40,000,000 or 45,000,000
4
acres of land of combined forest and grazing value, such areas
could be administered under cooperative arrangements similar to
those now in effect with other bureaus of this Government as
heretofore mentioned.
Sincerely yours,
Secretary of the Interior.
5
FILE COPY
Surname:
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
WASHINGTON
Karanagh
Restrips
3-9-40
INTERIOR
MAR 1 8/1940
RECEIVED The President,
SECRETARY'S
MAIL CENTER
The White House.
My dear Mr. President:
I have read Secretary Wallace's letter to you of March 2 with
a great deal of interest. After carefully considering all of the
points made by the Secretary I cannot escape from the idea that he
has failed to grasp the broad importance of the matter under dis-
cussion. It seems to no that under these circumstances it would be
entirely proper to present to you my concept of this problem and
how it can best be solved in the public's interest and under a long-
time land use plan.
The Act authorising the establishment of the forest reserves
was for the primary and avowed purpose of protecting the Nation's
forest resources. Forest reserves, and later national forests,
were established pursuant to the Act of June 4, 1897 (30 Stat. 11,
34, 36) U.S.C. Title 16, Section 475. In that Act this significant
section occurs:
"No public forest reservation shall be established
except to improve and protect the forests within
the reservation, or for the purpose of securing
favorable conditions of water flows, and to effect
a continuous supply of timber for the use and
necessities of citizens of the United States; but
it is not the purpose or intent of these provisions,
or of the act providing for such reservations, to
authorise the inclusion therein of lands more valu-
able for the minerals therein or for agricultural
purposes than for forest purposes."
The original reservations and forests were largely of the type
contemplated under the law of 1897. In recent years the forests
have been extended to embrace large areas of land clearly outside
the purview of the act. These extensions of forest areas into the
open or sparsely timbered range lands of the West have aggregated
many millions of acres. These extensions, ostensibly made for water-
shed protection purposes when timber values were impossible to
defend, in general constituted an invasion of areas of primary
value for range purposes and the imposition of & timber or forest
economy that has often been inimical to grazing or range use, and
to the unbalancing of the local economy built and maintained by the
livestock industry. Grazing use by the livestock industry of lands
within forests has been permitted because denial of such use would
have resulted in widespread disturbance of social and economic con-
ditions in the western range areas. Such grasing use of the forests
under sufferance is contrasted with legal recognition of grasing
use on the Federal ranges under the Taylor Act. The security pro-
vided under the Taylor Act has such obvious advantages as to need
no defense. Such security is essential to stabilization of the
stock industry; the development of a sound economy in the range
territory and rehabilitation of the ranges.
of the thousands of forest grasing users, only a small per-
centage is entirely dependent upon forest range for a livelihood.
The great majority use forest ranges for only limited seasons each
year. During the other seasons the stock are on private, leased,
or Federal range lands.
The ranges being administered under the Taylor Grasing Act
provide a part or all of the off-forest grazing by an estimated 75
percent of the forest users, while only approximately 25 percent
of the Federal range users are dependent in any degree upon the
national forests.
Of the thousands of forest users, many receive permits for
only a portion of the stock they own and wish to graze. The Forest
Service restricts numbers of stock and grazing use in accordance
with climatic conditions and requires owners to find other ranges
for any additional numbers of stock or for all stock during seasons
or parts of seasons when climatic conditions are unfavorable.
Other lands, therefore, carry and have carried the burden of the
full numbers of stock owned. In the case of the Grazing Service,
the sise of permits or licenses truly reflects the actual size of
the operations of the permittees or licensees. The apparently
large number of small licensees or permittees using the national
forest ranges is not a true picture of the sise of operations or
the classification of users as small or large.
The condition of forest ranges where they are admitted to be
in good condition is due largely to the forced use of public domain
and other range outside the national forests by stock that have
been excluded or those that are kept off until the Forest Service
decides that the forest range is ready for use.
2
Because of this restricted range policy of the Forest Service,
forest ranges have been protected at the expense of public and
private holdings and with little regard for the economic effect on
owners who, having the stock on hand, must necessarily graze them
somewhere while waiting to get onto the forests. This long estab-
lished policy of the Forest Service is in definite contrast with
that being followed by the Grazing Service for meeting the broad
social and economic problems in the range country. The Forest Ser-
vice is interested primarily in timber and forest products and such
related uses of forest lands that do not interfere with forest
growth. Forest administration has been directed along these lines
regardless of the effect on the livestock industry. They have per-
mitted vast areas of open range land to grow up into a jungle of
small reproduction, excluding grazing, and yet in many of these
same areas there is little or no opportunity ever to develop com-
mercial timber stands.
The cumulative effect of 35 years of this type of adminis-
tration is noticeable in hundreds of mountain valleys and rural
communities. Social and economic values have been sacrificed to
the growing of timber of no commercial worth and of no greater
watershed protection value than would have been furnished by &
good stand of grass and browse, the use of which would have per-
mitted continuance of a livestock economy, production of taxes,
income, and a livelihood for many persons directly and a very
large number indirectly.
The Forest Service has in its past administration failed to
give due consideration to proper use of private as well as public
lands in its long-time planning. It has substituted an economy
based primarily on timber production for the one evolved by trial
and error methods of the western people over a long period of years.
The Forest Service alone among Federal agencies has heretofore
failed to indicate a desire to recognize the desirability or sig-
nificance of correlated management of all Federal lands and land
resources. This applies especially to grazing lands and the forage
resources. This attitude on the part of the Forest Service is in
strong contrast to that of other bureaus of the Government where
cooperative agreements have been executed authorizing the Grazing
Service of the Interior Department to administer lands or act as
a grazing adviser. Such agreements are in effect with the Soil
Conservation Service and the Farm Security Administration of the
Department of Agriculture, and with the Reclamation Service, the
Biological Survey, the National Park Service, the Indian Service
of the Department of the Interior, and even on areas under the
control of the War and Navy Departments. Furthermore, the Grazing
Service secured enactment of the Pierce Act which permits corre-
lated use of privately owned, State, and county lands without
affecting titles or tax rolls.
3
The Grasing Service of this Department, under the authority of
the Taylor Grasing Act, is engaged in the administration of approxi-
mately 134,000,000 acres of grasing land in 10 western States.
Interspersed with this area are upwards of 25,000,000 acres of
national forest Lands, including entire "forests" in at number of
Instances, which are non-timbered graming lands. In close associa-
tion with these areas are 40,000,000 to 45,000,000 acres more of
national forest land, the primary resource value of which is grazing.
The tree growth supported thereon of minor or insignificant value
as 1 source of commercial timber or A basis for operations that
would provide s livalihood for some of our citizens. This area
within grasing districts and forests of more than 200,000,000 acres
of public grasing land, together with nearly a like amount of pri-
vately owned farm, ranch, and range lands constitutes the backbone
of the livestock industry and the general economy of these western
States.
In my opinkon the existing divided
administration of the public
grasing land is productive of waste and
institutenty, in a large
measure is unsound and ineffective, and consequently is d trimental
to the public interest. The proposal of Secretary Wallace to con-
tinue with only slight modification, this method of administration
would provide but minor improvements at best, and would be unwork-
able in practice. The proposed situation would be comparable to
two families attempting to use the same household facilities. Con-
fusion and conflict would be inevitable.
This Department has given long and careful consideration to
the question of properly conserving or providing for orderly use
of the vast heritage embraced in our Federal lands and the resources
thereon. I know how interested you are in trying to effect and put
into action a long-time program of administration that will provide
the greatest possible benefit, not only to the lands and the resources,
but to the public that owns both and is entitled to an efficient and
proper administration thereof.
I believe that a unified administration of the public grazing land
is imporative to the accomplishment of your purpose. May I suggest,
therefore, that the first step toward accomplishing this most desir-
able objective would be to determine the primary values of the lands
in question and then to assign them to the respective agencies res-
ponsible for their proper administration, This would result in the
transfer from the forests, to the grasing districts, under Section 13
of the Taylor Act, of administratively manageable areas approximating
25,000,000 acres of open non-commercial timber land of primary value
for grasing purposes, and the transfer of any manageable units of
lands supporting commercial timber stands from the grazing districts
to the adjacent forests. For the remaining 40,000,000 or 45,000,000
acres of land of combined forest and grasing value, such areas
could be administered under cooperative arrangements similar to
those now in effect with other bureaus of this Government as
heretofore mentioned.
Sincerely yours,
Secretary of the Interior.
5
Kawangh
Receipt
3-9-40
The President,
The White House.
My dear Mr. President:
I have read Secretary Wallace's letter to you of March 2 with
a great deal of interest. After carefully considering all of the
points made by the Secretary I cannot escape from the idea that he
has failed to grasp the broad importance of the matter under dis-
cussion. It seems to no that under these circumstances it would be
entirely proper to present to you my concept of this problem and
how it can best be solved in the public's interest and under a long-
time land use plan.
The act authorizing the establishment of the forest reserves
was for the primary and avowed purpose of protecting the Nation's
forest resources. Forest reserves, and later national forests,
were established pursuant to the Act of June 4, 1897 (30 Stat. 11,
34, 36) U.S.C. Title 16, Section 475. In that Act this significant
section occurs:
"No public forest reservation shall be established
except to improve and protect the forests within
the reservation, or for the purpose of securing
favorable conditions of water flows, and to effect
a continuous supply of timber for the use and
necessities of citizens of the United States; but
it is not the purpose or intent of these provisions,
or of the act providing for such reservations, to
authorise the inclusion therein of lands more valu-
able for the minerals therein or for agricultural
purposes than for forest purposes."
The original reservations and forests were largely of the type
contemplated under the law of 1897. In recent years the forests
have been extended to embrace large areas of land clearly outside
the purview of the act. These extensions of forest areas into the
open or spareely timbered range lands of the West have aggregated
many millions of acres. These extensions, ostensibly made for water-
shed protection purposes when timber values were impossible to
defend, in general constituted an invasion of areas of primary
value for range purposes and the imposition of a timber or forest
economy that has often been inimical to grazing or range use, and
to the unbalancing of the local economy built and maintained by the
livestock industry. Grazing use by the livestock industry of lands
within forests has been permitted because denial of such use would
have resulted in widespread disturbance of social and economic con-
ditions in the western range areas. Such grazing use of the forests
under sufferance is contrasted with legal recognition of grasing
use on the Federal ranges under the Taylor Act. The security pro-
vided under the Taylor Act has such obvious advantages as to need
no defense. Such security is essential to stabilization of the
stock industry; the development of a sound economy in the range
territory and rehabilitation of the ranges.
of the thousands of forest grasing users, only a small per-
centage is entirely dependent upon forest range for a livelihood.
The great majority use forest ranges for only limited seasons each
year. During the other seasons the stock are on private, leased,
or Federal range lands.
The ranges being administered under the Taylor Grasing Act
provide a part or all of the off-forest grazing by an estimated 75
percent of the forest users, while only approximately 25 percent
of the Federal range users are dependent in any degree upon the
national forests.
of the thousands of forest users, many receive permits for
only a portion of the stock they own and wish to graso. The Forest
Service restricts numbers of stock and grazing use in accordance
with climatic conditions and requires owners to find other ranges
for any additional numbers of stock or for all stock during seasons
or parts of seasons when climatic conditions are unfavorable.
Other lands, therefore, carry and have carried the burden of the
full numbers of stock owned. In the case of the Grazing Service,
the sise of permits or licenses truly reflects the actual size of
the operations of the permittees or licensees. The apparently
large number of small licensees or permittees using the national
forest ranges is not a true picture of the sise of operations or
the classification of users as small or large.
The condition of forest ranges where they are admitted to be
in good condition is due largely to the forced use of public domain
and other range outside the national forests by stock that have
been excluded or those that are kept off until the Forest Service
decides that the forest range is ready for use.
2
Because of this restricted range policy of the Forest Service,
forest ranges have been protected at the expense of public and
private holdings and with little regard for the economic effect on
owners who, having the stock on hand, must necessarily graze them
somewhere while waiting to get onto the forests. This long estab-
lished policy of the Forest Service is in definite contrast with
that being followed by the Grazing Service for meeting the broad
social and economic problems in the range country. The Forest Ser-
vice is interested primarily in timber and forest products and such
related uses of forest lands that do not interfere with forest
growth. Forest administration has been directed along these lines
regardless of the effect on the livestock industry. They have per-
mitted vast areas of open range land to grow up into a jungle of
small reproduction, excluding grazing, and yet in many of these
same areas there is little or no opportunity ever to develop com-
mercial timber stands.
The cumulative effect of 35 years of this type of adminis-
tration is noticeable in hundreds of mountain valleys and rural
communities. Social and economic values have been sacrificed to
the growing of timber of no commercial worth and of no greater
watershed protection value than would have been furnished by a
good stand of grass and browse, the use of which would have per-
mitted continuance of a livestock economy, production of taxes,
income, and a livelihood for many persons directly and a very
large number indirectly.
The Forest Service has in its past administration failed to
give due consideration to proper use of private as well as public
lands in its long-time planning. It has substituted an economy
based primarily on timber production for the one evolved by trial
and error methods of the western people over a long period of years.
The Forest Service alone among Federal agencies has heretofore
failed to indicato a desire to recognize the desirability or sig-
nificance of correlated management of all Federal lands and land
resources. This applies especially to grazing lands and the forage
resources. This attitude on the part of the Forest Service is in
strong contrast to that of other bureaus of the Government where
cooperative agreements have been executed authorizing the Grazing
Service of the Interior Department to administer lands or act as
a grazing adviser. Such agreements are in effect with the Soil
Conservation Service and the Farm Security Administration of the
Department of Agriculture, and with the Reclamation Service, the
Biological Survey, the National Park Service, the Indian Service
of the Department of the Interior, and even on areas under the
control of the War and Navy Departments. Furthermore, the Grazing
Service secured enactment of the Pierce Act which permits corre-
lated use of privately owned, State, and county lands without
affecting titles or tax rolls.
3
The Grazing Service of this Department, under the authority of
the Taylor Grazing Act, is engaged in the administration of approxi-
mately 134,000,000 acres of grasing land in 10 western States.
Interspersed with this area are upwards of 25,000,000 acres of
national forest lands, including entire "forests" in a number of
Instances, which are non-timbered grazing lands. In close associa-
tion with these areas are 40,000,000 to 45,000,000 acres more of
national forest land, the primary resource value of which is grazing.
The tree growth supported thereon of minor or insignificant value
as a source of commercial timber or a basis for operations that
would provide a livelihood for some of our citizens. This area
within grazing districts and forests of more than 200,000,000 acres
of public grasing land, together with nearly a like amount of pri-
vately owned farm, ranch, and range lands constitutes the backbone
of the livestock industry and the general economy of these western
States.
In my opinion the existing divided administration of the public
grasing land is productive of waste and ineffisioncy, in a large
measure is unsound and ineffective, and consequently is detrimental
to the public interest. The proposal of Secretary Wallace to con-
tinue with only alight modification, this method of administration
would provide but minor improvements at best, and would be unwork-
able in practice. The proposed situation would be comparable to
two families attempting to use the same household facilities. Con-
fusion and conflict would be inevitable.
This Department has given long and careful consideration to
the question of properly conserving or providing for orderly use
of the vast heritage embraced in our Federal lands and the resources
thereon. I know how interested you are in trying to effect and put
into action a long-time program of administration that will provide
the greatest possible benefit, not only to the lands and the resources,
but to the public that owns both and is entitled to an efficient and
proper administration thereof.
I believe that a unified administration of the public grazing land
is imporative to the accomplishment of your purpose. May I suggest,
therefore, that the first step toward accomplishing this most desir-
able objective would be to determine the primary values of the lands
in question and then to assign them to the respective agencies res-
ponsible for their proper administration. This would result in the
transfer from the forests, to the grasing districts, under Section 13
of the Taylor Act, of administratively manageable areas approximating
25,000,000 acres of open non-commercial timber land of primary value
for grazing purposes, and the transfer of any manageable units of
lands supporting commercial timber stands from the grazing districts
to the adjacent forests. For the remaining 40,000,000 or 45,000,000
acres of land of combined forest and grazing value, such areas
could be administered under cooperative arrangements similar to
those now in effect with other bureaus of this Government as
heretofore mentioned.
Sincerely yours,
Secretary of the Interior.
5