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Lectures in History: Conservation & the Progressive Era

Gifford Pinchot & Theodore Roosevelt (1907)

Gifford Pinchot & Theodore Roosevelt (1907)

Williamsburg, Virginia
Saturday, December 15, 2012

College of William and Mary professor Andrew Fisher examines the first conservation effort in American history to protect forests from rampant logging and hydraulic mining.  During the Progressive Era from 1901 through 1909, President Theodore Roosevelt worked with Gifford Pinchot -- the first Chief of the United States Forest Service -- to set aside more than a hundred and fifty million acres of land to be under federal government control.  This land was designated for National Parks and responsible logging.

Updated: Monday, December 17, 2012 at 12:29pm (ET)

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