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<br />000914 <br /> <br />WILDERNESS: CONCEPTANDCHALLENGE <br /> <br />BY: DONALD N. BALDWIN <br /> <br />Reprinted from the ColorBdo MB!}szine, Summer 1967, by permission of the State Historical Society of Colorado <br /> <br />The "wilderness concept," the conservation of America's natural heritage through the <br />preservation of wilderness areas,' was first translated into a functional plan with actual <br />results during the period from 1919 to 1933, The source of this initiative lay within the <br />United States Forest Service, specifically the Denver office of that Agency, The prime <br />mover within the organization in this regard was Arthur Hawthorn Carhart, whose principal <br />drive came not only from general conservationist sentiments but also from the orientation <br />derived from his profession of landscape architecture, <br /> <br />Just as Frederick Jackson Turner in 1B93 had been disturbed by the foreseeable <br />consequences of the closing of the frontier,2 there were men in the post-World War r period <br />who found the rapid diminution in the amount of wilderness land alarming and who pointed <br />to the need to protect the remaining superlative scenic areas for recreational use. This was a <br />use for which the Congress had up until then allotted the Forest Service little money, and <br />for which the Service had even fewer plans or policies; such a use seemed visionary, if not <br />irrational. to many officials, Despite this view, the decade following World War I was <br />epochal for the conservation movement in the United States, because it marked the <br />beginning of an important stage in which a new brand of conservation was carried out,3 <br /> <br />An authority on conservation has noted recently that there now exist numerous <br />biographies and historical monographs which analyze and describe the conservation <br />problems in our National Forests and our National Parks,4 Despite the abundance of such <br />material, there is a dearth of literature on the topic of outdoor recreation,5 particularly that <br />phase or type of outdoor recreation reqUiring "wilderness" as an essential ingredient, <br />Although conservation organizations have published rather extensive writings on die subject <br />of wilderness, there remains a wide gap in the accounts of the origin and initial application <br />of the wilderness concept which needs to be bridged, The lacuna referred to is the absence <br />of the detailed facts concerning the genesis and first applications of the wilderness concept <br />during the period 1919-1924, These early actions began at Trappers Lake, Colorado, in <br />1919, settin9 e precedent, The second application occurred in the Superior National Forest, <br />Minnesota, in 1921, and the third in the Gila National Forest, New Mexico, in 1924, It is <br />the first two applications which have not previously been covered in the historical accounts <br />of the evolution of the wilderness concept, <br /> <br />A thorough examination of materials prepared by the Forest Service and by <br />conservation organizations has disclosed that the available accounts begin with the third and <br />