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Full Description
It has been said that Michigan's nineteenth century white pine stands were the finest the world has ever seen. Dense, parklike stands, more than 150 feet tall, covered vast areas northward from the Bay City- Muskegon line. The sheer quantity of timber lured many adventurous entrepreneurs and enterprising farmers to Michigan. Lumber became a mainstay of Michigan's economy as logging interests and railroad entrepreneurs became adept at harvesting, transporting, and processing pine logs. Many considered the pine to be practically limitless.
In October of 1871, the first indication of a troubled future occurred when Michigan settlers experienced fires unlike any they had ever seen. Following two months of serious drought, and fed by hundreds of small fires set by land-clearing operations, much of northern Lower Michigan erupted in flames; dry winds fanned the many small fires into one unbelievable conflagration that swept entirely across the Lower Peninsula, from Lake Michigan to Lake Huron. Many towns were reduced to ashes, among them Holland, Glen Haven, Huron City, Sand Beach, White Rock, and Forestville. Navigation was interrupted on Lake Huron and as far downriver as Detroit because of the heavy smoke. More than 200 people lost their lives.
Michigan's State Forests recounts how an abandoned, cutover, and often burned wilderness has been converted once again into highly productive and protected public lands. For more than 100 years, these lands have been preserved, managed and developed to form one of Michigan's great assets, not only for economic development but also as enhancements to our quality of life.
Contents
ContentsAcknowledgments 000Prologue. Pre-European to European Settlement 000Introduction 000Chapter 1. The Awakening (Public Concerns about Natural Resources), 1888¿1903 000Chapter 2. The Foundation (Early State Forest administration and organization), 1903¿1907 000Chapter 3. Getting Organized, 1907¿1909 000Chapter 4. Custodial Management, 1909¿1920 000Chapter 5. State Government Reorganization, 1921¿1930 000Chapter 6. Great Depression (Civilian Conservation Corps), 1931¿1940 000Chapter 7. The War Years, 1941¿1946 000Chapter 8. Post War Development, 1946¿1958 000Chapter 9. Fully Managed, Multiple-use Forest Era (including oil and gas development, deer management, forest cultivation, recreational aspects), 1959¿1975 000Chapter 10. Forest Resource Planning (Key values, environmentalism and public participation), 1975¿1990 000Chapter 11. Ecosystem Management and Biodiversity, 1991¿2005 000Epilogue 000Bibliography 000Index 000



