President Roosevelt Dedicated Great Smoky National Park (1940)

On September 2, 1940, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt stood at the podium on the border of Tennessee and addressed a crowd of ten thousand standing below him in the state of North Carolina.  The occasion was the dedication of Great Smoky National Park, the 500,000-acre forest that straddles the two states.

President Franklin Roosevelt dedicates Great Smoky National Park (photo by National Park Service)

Great Smoky became the second eastern national park (after Acadia, in Maine) when it was authorized on June 15, 1934.  For decades, park enthusiasts had lobbied for an eastern park that could join the beloved parks of the West—Yellowstone, Yosemite, Grand Canyon and others.  Willis and Ann Davis, wealthy and prominent members of Knoxville, Tennessee, society, first broached the idea after a western tour of national parks in 1923.  Creation of an eastern park was complicated.  Whereas western parks were carved out of federal lands, land in the East needed to be purchased from private owners.  And much of the East was already in use for other purposes.  Loggers, for example, fought Great Smoky because the forests would be off limits to cutting.

Nonetheless, the idea took hold. The North Carolina and Tennessee legislatures appropriate some funds, as did the U.S. government.  When these appropriations were clearly insufficient, the philanthropist John D. Rockefeller Jr. stepped in.  He donated $5 million to the cause, equaling the appropriations of state and federal governments.  Eventually, $12 million was spent to acquire the park’s original 300,000 acres.

The significance of Great Smoky is hard to overstate.  It is one of the largest contiguous stands of deciduous forest in the world, earning it classifications as an International Biosphere Reserve (1976) and a UNESCO World Heritage Site (1983).  The mountains of Great Smoky are among the world’s oldest.  The park contains most of the highest mountains in the eastern U.S., among them Mt. Davis, named for park advocate Willis Davis.  The area escaped the last glaciation, and therefore is a meeting place of northern and southern forested ecosystems.  Consequently, plant diversity is high.  More than 1600 plant species live there, including more than 100 species of deciduous trees, more than exist on the entire European continent.  Almost all of the park is forested, about a quarter of which is old-growth forest.

Great Smoky National Park (photo by Brian Stansbery)

The park is also the most visited national park.  More than 11.3 million people visited the park in 2017, double the visitation of the second most popular national park.  The park is within one day’s drive of most of the population of the eastern United States.  The crowds that visit the park today resemble the crowd that gathered on this day in 1940 when President Roosevelt dedicated the park.  The ceremony at Newfound Gap straddled the state lines of Tennessee and North Carolina.  Reports listed the crowd that day over 10,000, perhaps as high as 20,000.  Roosevelt said then what most of us still believe about our national parks:

“There are trees here that stood before our forefathers ever came to this continent; there are brooks that still run as clear as on the day the first pioneer cupped his hand and drank from them. In this Park, we shall conserve these trees, the pine, the red-bud, the dogwood, the azalea, the rhododendron, the trout and the thrush for the happiness of the American people.

We used up or destroyed much of our natural heritage just because that heritage was so bountiful. We slashed our forests, we used our soils, we encouraged floods, we overconcentrated our wealth, we disregarded our unemployed—all of this so greatly that we were brought rather suddenly to face the fact that unless we gave thought to the lives of our children and grandchildren, they would no longer be able to live and to improve upon our American way of life.

In these later years we have tried sincerely and honestly to look ahead to the future years. We are at last definitely engaged in the task of conserving the bounties of nature, thinking in the terms of the whole of nature.”

References:

Gsmp.com.  History.  Available at:  http://www.gsmnp.com/great-smoky-mountains-national-park/history/.  Accessed September 1, 2017.

McKown, Harry.  2007.  September 1940:  Dedication of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.  North Carolina Miscellany.  Available at:  http://blogs.lib.unc.edu/ncm/index.php/2007/09/01/this_month_sept_1940/.  Accessed September 1, 2017.

National Geographic Travel.  Great Smoky Mountains.  Available at:  http://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/national-parks/great-smoky-mountains-national-park/.  Accessed September 1, 2017.

OhRanger.com.  Great Smoky Mountains National Park, History of Great Smoky.  Available at:  http://www.ohranger.com/smoky-mountains/history-great-smoky.  Accessed September 1, 2017.

Roosevelt, Franklin D.  1940.  Address at Dedication of Great Smoky Mountains National Park.  September 2, 1940.  Available at:  http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=16002.  Accessed September 1, 2017.

Waters, t. Wayne.  2011.  The First Family of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.  Smoky Mountain Living, June 1, 2011.  Available at:  http://www.smliv.com/features/the-first-family-of-the-great-smoky-mountains-national-park/.  Accessed September 1, 2017

This Month in Conservation

November 1
Ansel Adams Shoots “Moonrise” (1941)
November 2
National Bison Day
November 3
William Cullen Bryant Born (1794)
November 3
Rosalie Edge, Conservationist and Suffragette, born (1877)
November 4
UNESCO Created (1946)
November 5
Ethelwynn Trewavas Born (1900)
November 6
International Day to Protect the Environment during War
November 7
Costa Rica Constitution Enacted (1949)
November 8
World Town Planning Day
November 9
First Live Panda Leaves China (1936)
November 10
Guinness Book of World Records Born (1951)
November 11
Leonardo DiCaprio Born (1974)
November 12
Salim Ali Born (1896)
November 13
Amory Lovins Born (1947)
November 14
US Crushes Elephant Ivory (2013)
November 15
America Recycles Day
November 16
Global Climate Change Research Act Passed (1990)
November 17
David Livingstone Arrives at Victoria Falls (1855)
November 18
Asa Gray, Father of American Botany, Born (1810)
November 19
World Toilet Day
November 20
John Merle Coulter, Pioneering Botanist, Born (1851)
November 21
Lava Beds National Monument Created (1925)
November 22
Grofe’s “Grand Canyon Suite” Premiered (1931)
November 23
National Eat-A-Cranberry Day
November 24
“On the Origin of Species” Published (1859)
November 25
Nikolai Vavilov, Pioneering Russian Agronomist, Born (1887)
November 26
Anna Maurizio, Swiss Bee Expert, Born (1900)
November 27
Bill Nye, the Science Guy, Born (1955)
November 28
Elsie Quarterman, Plant Ecologist, Born (1910)
November 29
U.S. Rations Coffee (1942)
November 30
Mark Twain, American Humorist, Born (1835)
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