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The Jefferson National Forest - An Appalachian Environmental History (Hardcover)
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The Jefferson National Forest - An Appalachian Environmental History (Hardcover)
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The highland forests of southwestern Virginia were a sacred land to
Native Americans and one they relied upon for sustenance. After
European contact, this beautiful country drew successive waves of
settlers and visitors, and for a brief yet intense period,
industrialists rapaciously exploited its timber resources,
particularly in the higher elevations where the woodlands had
survived the nearby valleys' generations of agricultural use. This
is the story of how various peoples have regarded this land over
the centuries and how, starting in the early twentieth century, the
federal government acquired 700,000 acres of it to create what is
now the Jefferson National Forest (JNF). Will Sarvis's in-depth
history explores the area's significance to such native tribes as
the Cherokee and Shawnee, for whom it functioned as a buffer zone
in late prehistory, and its attraction for nineteenth-century
romantics who, arriving in stagecoaches, became the area's first
tourists. Aggressive commercial logging gave way to the arrival of
the U.S. Forest Service, which patched the JNF together through
successive purchases of privately owned land and instituted a more
regulated harvesting of various timber resources. Public support
for Forest Service policy during the Depression and World War II
was followed by controversies, including the use of eminent domain.
In presenting this history, Sarvis probes the many complexities of
land stewardship and, in analysis that is sure to spark debate,
discusses how and why the JNF could abandon clear-cutting and
return to traditional selective tree management. An ongoing
experiment in democratic land use, the JNF contains many lessons
about our relationship with the natural environment. This book
delineates those lessons in a clear and compelling narrative that
will be of great interest to policy makers, activists, and indeed
anyone drawn to American environmental history and Appalachian
studies.
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