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<br />OOfl915 <br /> <br />" <br /> <br />omit any reference to the first two, According to a 1963 Forest Service pamphlet, for <br />example, "nearly 40 years ago" the Forest Service pioneered in preserving America's <br />wilderness heritage "led by Aldo Leopold," then the Assistant Forester of District 3, located <br />in Albuquerque, New Mexico, This tribute is historically inaccurate. Continuing in this vein, <br />the booklet stated: <br /> <br />The Forest Service pioneered this concept in the 1920's. Studies of wild lands on the National <br />Forests began, and in 1924 a large part of what is now the Gila Wilderness in New Mexico was set <br />aside as a special area for the preservation of wilderness. The Gila, the nation's first designated <br />wilderness, contains 500,000 acres of primitive American lands astride the Mogollon Rim and Diablo <br />mountain ranges.6 <br /> <br />The quotation above is vague and incorrect on several counts but among conservation, <br />ists, the foregoing account of the origin of the wilderness concept has apparently been <br />accepted, For example, a 1940 publication of the Wilderness Society likewise traced <br />wilderness areas from "their formal beginning in the mind and on the pen point of Aldo <br />Leopold to the achievement by Robert Marshall of a practical new wilderness system in the <br />National Forests."] Moreover, Harvey Broome stated: "Unquestionably, Aldo Leopold was <br />the Jeremiah of wilderness thinking."B Broome explained that in 1925 Leopold had written <br />an article about the value of wilderness,9 from which Robert Marshall had quoted five years <br />later.'o "But if Leopold was the prophet of the wilderness movement," Broome asserted, <br />"Marshall was the first to suggest organization,'''' Broome did not, however, take into <br />account the accomplishments, publications, and activities of Arthur Carhart between 1919 <br />and 1 924. <br /> <br />~ <br />I <br />, <br />I <br />[ <br /> <br />I n this connection, it is instructive to note what Aldo Leopold himself stated when he <br />attempted to trace the "origin and ideals of wilderness areas,'"2 In 1940 he wrote: <br /> <br />~ <br /> <br />" <br /> <br />I will here attempt to cover the history of the wilderness movement in the Southwest prior to <br />1926. I suppose subsequent events are too well known to require comment, <br /> <br />The earliest action I can find in my files is a letter dated September 21, 1922, notifying the <br />District Forester that two local Game Protective Associations had endorsed the establishment of a <br />wilderness area on the head of the Gila River, in the Gila National Forest. I suppose one may assume <br />8 prior "incubation period" of a year or two, I take it, then, that the movement in the Southwest <br />must have started about 1920. <br /> <br />" <br /> <br />This assumption is further corroborated by the publication in 1921, of my paper, "The <br />Wilderness and Its Place in Forest Recreational Policy., . ," In 1924 the action stage was reached, I <br />have a map dated March 31 [1924J showing the Gila area boundaries as originally proposed by me <br />and as approved by District Forester F. C. W, Pooler. I do not know when Washington finally added <br />Its approval. <br /> <br />" <br />I <br /> <br />How widely had the idea spread by 19247 I offer in evidence the resolutions passed by the <br />National Conference on Outdoor Recreation (Jour, Forestry, October, 19241 which contain no <br />mention of wilderness.13 <br /> <br />2 <br />