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A Pioneering Effort in American Forestry...
In 1897, the same year as the Forest Reserve
Organic Act and the first College forestry degree programs in the
United States began,
Berea College initiated a forestry effort. It was initiated by
Professor Silas C. Mason in the September, 1897. The goals were
general forestry
education offerings for the
students and a source of wood and income for the College. Mason's
first step was to take horseback rides through the hills just east
of Berea in order to locate suitable tracts of land to acquire.
Berea College did not and does not offer a forestry degree program.
The forestry, natural resources and biology classes offered through
the Agriculture and Natural Resources and Biology Departments have
resulted in many Berea students going on to advanced degrees and
careers in Forestry, Wildlife Mgt. and other natural resource related
areas.
Egalitarian Forestry
Berea College's forestry initiative was perhaps
the first in the United States launched within an egalitarian framework.
Berea College, located on the edge of the Cumberland Plateau in
Berea, KY, was established in 1855 by Christian anti-slavery
activists to offer education to both whites and emancipated slaves.
In 1897,
Berea College was a unique private college, especially for the
American South: interracial, coeducational, and tuition free
education offered to qualified, but economically disadvantaged,
students.
Additionally, the College had already made a commitment to serve
the great need for education in the Southern Appalachian Region.
In 1897, forestry practice had mainly been the province of the
wealthy (e.g. Biltmore Estate) or the government.
The Pioneer: Professor Mason
Silas C. Mason |
Silas C. Mason (right) was a pioneer
in American Forestry. Mason, Professor of Horticulture and Forestry
at Berea, had an advanced
degree in Horticulture (Kansas Agriculture College, now Kansas
State) but lacked today's equivalent of a Forestry degree. He had
traveled to Europe to study and observe forestry in France, Switzerland,
Germany and Prussia. In 1895, he was offered the position of Assistant
Chief of the USDA Division of Forestry (now Forest Service) by
Dr. Bernhard Fernow. He published early research on Old Field Forest
Growth in 1899 (Central States Forest Experiment Station Archives).
While many of the pioneers in American forestry tried to apply
European forestry models to North America, Mason realized, "..how
different American forest problems are from those of the Old World
and how great is our need of the study of the different tree species
under conditions most likely to be those of the future."
Forest Land Acquisition
In 1898 Berea acquired its first forest land. The first tracts
of forest land were purchased by Mason from his personal funds.
His stated purpose was to have land for the study of forestry by
his classes and to provide wood and income for the College. In
1899, Ms. Sarah Fay of Boston(in the middle), MA stepped in as
Mason's benefactor, providing funds for land acquisition and his
salary. She recognized the benefit of having a continuous block
of forest. By 1918 the Fay endowment had provided for the acquisition
of 5,400 acres. Allowance was made to use timber incomes to support
future acquisitions.
Abused Land
The condition of the land that became the
Berea College Forest was similar to most of the land in the Southern
Appalachians in
the late 19th Century.
The land had been cleared, over-farmed/grazed, burned repeatedly
and the forests indiscriminately cut. Even steep land was tilled
for row crops. Much of the site quality was low either due to
soil erosion resulting from farming or to inherent conditions
(e.g. dry, rocky sites). Most of the land acquired between 1898
and 1960 was in some early-successional stage due to agriculture
(usually), fire and/or harvest. Descriptions of the tracts ranged
from young tree growth cover to bare soil with erosion gullies.
Fire control, using faculty, staff and student crews, began as
the land was acquired. However, many of today's best forest stands
(tree size, quality, health, diversity, etc.) resulted from forested
areas that were commercially clear-cut just prior to acquisition.
Subsequent thinnings have helped such stands.
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