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Charles
W. Garfield, born in Wisconsin in 1848, first came to
revere trees as a child, the story goes, on the trip
that brought his family to reside in Michigan. Encountering
a monumental roadside tree near Martin, on the coach
road between Kalamazoo and Grand Rapids, the stage stopped,
and its occupants gaped. Reputed to be ten feet in diameter,
the champion walnut reportedly prompted Garfield's father
to urge, "Take off your hat, Charlie, to that noble
tree."
The
meeting was an important one for Michigan's forests.
Garfield, later a successful and beloved Grand Rapids
banker, would become a mighty force in the battle to
renew Michigan's cutover and burned-over forests-devoting
over 40 years to the cause, mostly as a volunteer.
An
1870 graduate of Michigan Agricultural College, Garfield
became a nurseryman and horticulturist, then Secretary
of the State Horticultural Society in 1876. As a new
member of the State House of Representatives in 1881,
Garfield introduced a modest bill that required the
planting of shade trees along both sides of public highways
one hundred feet apart and within eight feet of the
highway edge, protected existing shade trees on roadsides,
and credited roadside property owners for a portion
of their highway tax if they planted trees.
Garfield's
bill did not pass, and the plunder of Michigan's forests
continued. At an 1897 Arbor Day observance, A. A. Crozier
described the grim scene in Michigan's north. While
traveling to farmers' institutes in the region the past
two winters, he said, "
I think some of you
will be as surprised as I was when I say that in traveling
nearly two thousand miles through some forty counties
in the lumber regions of the State, I cannot now recall
having seen in any one place as much as a single standing
acre of white pine in good condition." Riding from
Manistee on the Lake Michigan shore to Saginaw, he added,
he had seen an almost continuous succession of "abandoned
lumber fields, miles upon miles of stumps as far as
the eye can see
"
Such
scenes, and the swift abandonment of the north by the
lumber industry, fostered a new political consensus
that the state had been exploited and cheated. The Legislature
created a forestry commission in 1899. Charles Garfield
was named president of the three-man panel.
The
law authorized the Commission to withdraw from sale
up to 200,000 acres of state swamplands and tax-reverted
lands to create a state forest reserve. In May 1901,
at the next session of the Legislature, lawmakers approved
a reserve of approximately 35,000 acres-the genesis
of the modern state forest system.
In
a pamphlet entitled A Little Talk about Michigan Forestry,
of which 5,000 copies were made and distributed around
the state in 1900, Garfield attacked the "thoughtlessness
in the great waste of our forestry heritage." Garfield
envisioned "great areas of trees all up and down
this beautiful state, protecting head waters of our
rivers, making use of our unfertile sands, giving variety
and beauty to our gentle hills and refreshing the weary,
whether human or otherwise, with nature's quiet cathedrals."
Not
all of those observing the forest reserves in their
back yards were impressed. Residents of northern Michigan
resented policies made by downstate legislators and
state officials, arguing that immediate development
by private interests was more beneficial than long-range
public lands management. In July 1902, the Commission
and guests traveled to Roscommon to tour the new reserves.
"Flags were at half-mast on the flagpoles in the
village," reported a local newspaper, "and
the reception they received from the people, although
civil and without any hostile demonstration, was speakingly
that their presence was not wanted." But Garfield
and the Commission persevered, slowly winning converts.
Devastating
forest fires consumed millions of acres of northern
Michigan lands in the fall of 1908 and renewed calls
for a greater effort to renew the state's forest heritage.
In his January 1909 State of the State message to the
Legislature, Michigan Governor Fred Warner directed
its attention "to the desirability of taking active
measures to lessen the fire waste of general property
which is steadily increasing and which, during the past
five years in this country, has aggregated a billion
and a quarter of dollars."
But
the 1909 Legislature at first balked at reforming Michigan's
forest policies. Garfield fretted in a letter to an
ally, "If we are checkmated in the present Legislature,
after all that has been done, there will be a hopelessness
in the task before us, which has never been so strongly
in evidence before. It seemed as if after the holocaust
of last year and with that splendid work of the commission
of inquiry in evidence, that if ever there was an opportunity
to get rational laws enacted now was the time."
But
at nearly the last minute a new bill appeared and cleared
the Legislature just before its adjournment. It created
a Public Domain Commission-the forerunner of today's
Department of Natural Resources -that would have "power
and jurisdiction" over all public lands and forest
reserves, and interests including stream protection
and control, forest fire protection and other matters
previously under the autonomous commissioner of the
land office, Auditor General and Game, Fish and Forestry
Warden. The Commission was charged with creating a minimum
reserve of 200,000 acres.
Although
Garfield did not believe it at the time, his work on
the Forestry Commission and lobbying of the Legislature
had produced a major shift in management of northern
lands that would provide the base for a rebirth of the
forests. Today, the seeds they planted have sprouted,
giving Michigan 3.9 million acres of state forestland.
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