
Edward
Merriam Griffith
1872-1939
Inducted 1998
"The
whole system of forest taxation is wrong,
for it puts a premium on forest destruction" –
Griffith
Wisconsin enacted its first
comprehensive forestry law in 1903. This
law provided for a forestry commission
with power to appoint a State Forester
whose professional qualifications required
certification by the U.S. Secretary of
Agriculture. E.M. Griffith became Wisconsin's
first state forester to begin a decade
of service to progressive Wisconsin forestry.
Griffith embarked upon a series of programs
including control of forest fires, acquisition
of land for the Forest Reserves, conveyance
of federal lands to the state and protection
of the headwaters of the streams flowing
into the Mississippi River and Lake Superior.
Griffith received the Wisconsin
Forestry Hall of Fame Award in 1984 in
recognition of ten years of service as
Wisconsin's first state forester.
FACTS
Edward Merriam Griffith
was appointed Wisconsin’s first
state forester on his 32nd birthday,
February 8, 1904. A native of Brooklyn,
NY, Griffith entered Yale with the class
of 1895 as an engineering student. He
left Yale during his senior year to study
forestry in Germany because at the time
there was no school of forestry in the
US. In 1898, the Department of
Agriculture Chief of Forestry, Gifford
Pinochot, hired Griffith to promote the
concept of management in the national forests.
Under Pinochot’s
direction, Griffith lead special assignments to
study forest conditions in the Hawaiian
Islands, the Philippines, Japan, India,
Australia and Germany.
Wisconsin enacted
its first comprehensive forestry law
in 1903. This law provided for a Forestry
Commission with power to appoint a State
Forester. After being appointed state
forester, Griffith embarked upon a series
of programs including the control of forest
fires, acquisition of land for the Forest
Reserves, conveyance of federal lands to
the state and protection of the headwaters
of the streams flowing into the Mississippi
and Lake Superior.
Griffith demonstrated his foresight in environmental
issues as well. He repeatedly stressed the influences
that forests had upon the water of the state
with stream flow stabilization, retarding of
snowmelt in the spring and ground water replenishment.
He also conducted educational programs at the
University of Wisconsin – Madison towards
the advancement of forestry.
During the years
between 1911-1915, Griffith added an additional
183,000 acres of forest to the Forest Reserves
and approved the establishment of the first
state plantation.
While Griffith was continuing his efforts at
building and funding a statewide forestry program,
opposition from educators, the lumbering interests
and northern legislators grew to challenge
him and his programs. In 1915, a critical Legislative
Committee report and ultimately a Supreme Court
decision ruled against state forestry laws.
Because of this, Wisconsin laws regarding forestry
and use of state funds to purchase forest reserve
lands were declared illegal.
This legislation halted all of Griffith’s
programs except fire prevention and control.
After
ten years of dedicated service, Griffith
left Wisconsin to spend the remainder of
his days in Connecticut and Florida, where
he died at the age of 67.
In 1921, a joint
resolution for the adoption of a forest
amendment to the constitution cleared
the legislature. It limited the appropriation
for forestry in any one year to the identical
rate Griffith had ventured to seek in 1909.
On September 14, 1948, D.C. Everest, the
then President of Marathon Corporation
and later president of the American Forestry
Association, noted Griffith in his “Review
of Forestry in Wisconsin” address.
He remarked that Griffith was advocating
a program for the perpetuation of forests
back in 1909, but due to lack of vision
in the men of that time, Griffith was literally, “run
out of the state.”
• Wisconsin’s
First State Forester
• Worked to create a statewide forestry program
• Taught Wisconsin citizens about the importance
of forests
• Laid the groundwork for the future of Wisconsin
conservation
(Publication
of this fact sheet made possible with
assistance from Krause Publications, Iola, Wisconsin.)
For further information on
Edward Merriam Griffith, read his Hall
of Fame monograph.
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