From collection Creating Acadia National Park: The George B. Dorr Research Archive of Ronald H. Epp

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Work, Hubert Sec of Interior-1923-28
Work, Hubert
Sec. of Interior 1923-28
Received 12/9/2008
97411
TX24
10-23
12
ACAD
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
ACAD
CARRIAGE RD:
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
ACADTA
NA IONAL PARK
FILE No.
PAPERS
Relating to Road Hearing
before
Secretary Work
March 26
1924
(A) See also Series I (chronology), 1924, for references
to Interiorfecretory H. work and Road Development
(B) Subject file "Roads: 1924 twining Hearrigg"
Note: See also Ronald H. Epp chronological file for k
additional primary documentation for the Dorr biography.
12/20/2024
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK LIBRARY
*
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK LIBR
This references a 141-page set of noteo
Collection detailing the 1924 Road Hearings.
Charles W. Eliot to George B. Dorr Esq.
Cambridge, Mass.,
7 Fedruary 1924.
My dear Dorr:
Yours of the 5th is at hand. I have
received notice of the meeting of the Hancock County
Trustees of Public Reservations at Bar Harbor, and
will sign the necessary deed whenever received. The
tract will be a very valuable acquisition for the
Lafayatta National Park.
There is certainly a remarkable outpouring of
talk and tears over Wilson's death; but I doubt 11
it means that the American people is now going to
do what he wanted them to do in 1920.
That is,
I doubt if the American people as a whole has recover-
ed from the moral collapse it experienced in 1919.
Moral reforms, like educational reforms, are very
slow.
Lodge has certainly not improved his own
position before the country by what he lately said
in the Senate.
I wrote a rather full letter to Secretary Work,
the main objects of which were to warn him against
Pepper and to thank him for his prompt recall of his
(7 February 1924)
2.
order to stop work at the Lafayette National Park
this winter.
What is to be apprehended is that
the present movement in favor of economics in the
National Service will extend to the parks, where
economies mean reductions or postpoment of the
public enjoyment of the Parks.
There are only two
regions of public expenditure in which economy is
even & less legitimate motive than in the Parks,
namely, the postoffice and the public schools. In
those two departments economy is positively silly;
because it is well known that expenditure there
mone increased productivity and higher profits in
the important industries, and hence in national
well-being.
Sincerely yours,
Charles W. Eliot.
George B. Dorr, Esq.
8/26/2021
Work, Hubert (1860-1942), physician and secretary of the interior I
American
National
Biography
Work, Hubert
FREE
Note:
(03 July 1860-14 December 1942)
See Dorr Archive
John W. Heaton
SeriesIII, "Roads:
https://doi.org/10.1093/anb/9780198606697.article.0600736
1924 Hearing".
Published in print: 1999
Published online: February 2000
Hubert Work
Courtesy of the Library of Congress (LC-USZ62-110613).
Work, Hubert (03 July 1860-14 December 1942), physician and secretary of the
interior, was born in Marion Center, Pennsylvania, the son of Moses Thompson
Work and Tabitha Logan Van Horn, farmers. He graduated from Indiana (Pa.)
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Work, Hubert (1860-1942), physician and secretary of the interior I American National Biography
State Normal School, studied medicine from 1882 to 1884 at the University of
Michigan, then transferred to the University of Pennsylvania, where he
received an M.D. in 1885. He established a practice in Greeley, Colorado, then
moved to Pueblo, where he founded the Woodcroft Hospital for mental
illnesses in 1896. He directed this facility until 1917.
Work acquired his professional reputation as a clinician and psychiatrist,
earning honorary degrees and holding memberships in scientific organizations
devoted to his specialty. In the 1880s and 1890s he served with the Colorado
State Board of Medical Examiners and acted as president of both the State
Board of Health and the Colorado State Medical Society. In 1906 he began his
first term as a delegate of the American Medical Association, becoming in 1916
the first chairman of the House of Delegates and in 1921 the president of the
association. He joined the Army Medical Corps in 1917, serving as medical
adviser to the provost marshal general. Work earned the rank of colonel and at
the end of World War I entered the Army Medical Reserve.
Although noted for his efforts in medicine, Work gained national prominence
as a political activist. His reputation as a stalwart Republican landed him the
chair of the Colorado State Republican Convention and a delegate's position at
the Republican National Convention in 1908. He was a member of the
Republican National Committee from 1913 to 1919. His talents as a political
organizer became well known, and he established a strong base of support
among farmers during Warren G. Harding's 1920 presidential campaign. His
success in this endeavor led Harding to appoint Work as first assistant to
Postmaster General Will Hays in 1921 and to postmaster general after Hay's
resignation in 1922. He held this post for over a year, gaining a reputation for
efficiency and businesslike management. He instituted mail service reforms
and proposed economizing measures, such as government ownership of Post
Office buildings.
When the controversial Albert Fall resigned under pressure as secretary of the
interior in 1923, Harding named Work as Fall's successor. Allegations of
corruption, mismanagement, and inefficiency followed as details of Fall's
involvement in the Teapot Dome scandal surfaced. Work set out to alleviate the
department's internal turmoil and to restore its credibility. He reorganized
daily operations, simplified policy, gained the support of his agency and staff,
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Work, Hubert (1860-1942), physician and secretary of the interior I American National Biography
and sought efficiency through application of business methods. He wanted to
move beyond the controversy between the East and the West over proper
disposal of western resources by declaring an end to the era of exploitation of
the public domain and heralding a new age of conservation. These actions
improved the Interior Department's image and raised awareness of serious
threats to the environment.
The Reclamation Service represented one of the more pressing problems of
Work's administration. Flat agricultural markets in the 1920s made it difficult
for water users to cover their obligations to the government. He replaced the
agency's director and appointed a review committee. In August 1923 Work
issued a memo, "The Tentative Policy of the Reclamation Bureau of the
Department of the Interior," addressing the status of existing and
contemplated projects. He proposed to reduce overhead through
implementation of business accounting measures, subdivision of large farms,
diversification of crops, establishment of new markets for farm produce, and
informing water users that government water projects should be treated as
interest-free loans. Regarding new reclamation project proposals, he cautioned
planners to consider the ability of farmers to repay work, operation, and
maintenance costs.
Work addressed several other issues during his tenure. Stock grazing on public
lands emerged as a serious problem in the 1920s. Unauthorized and
unrestricted grazing threatened to destroy rangelands. Work lobbied for more
government control of range resources, called for stock raisers to help preserve
grazing lands, and stressed the necessity of cooperation between industry and
government. In response to public criticism over the Teapot Dome scandal,
Work helped establish the Federal Oil Conservation Board in 1924 to improve
practices and encourage cooperation between government and the oil industry.
Work demonstrated concern for the preservation of scenic resources and
development of the National Park Service, generating interest in setting aside
new lands for parks, especially in the East, where few existed. He felt these
areas should be preserved in a natural state for the purposes of "recreation,
education, and scientific research."
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Work, Hubert (1860-1942), physician and secretary of the interior I American National Biography
Work also faced condemnation of the controversial Bureau of Indian Affairs.
The General Allotment Act of 1887-designed to assimilate Indians by
promoting private ownership of tribal land-had led instead to an erosion of
the Indian estate (individual and tribal landholdings on and off reservations),
impoverishment, health and education concerns, and an assault on Indian
culture. Work supported enforcement of the legislation, stressing only that
more care be taken in the removal of government trust restrictions on Indian
allotments. However, persistent criticism of the Indian Bureau led Work to
commission the Institute for Government Research to prepare a study of Indian
affairs, economics, and social conditions. This survey, published in 1928,
revealed the ineffectiveness of the Indian Bureau and recommended sweeping
changes in policy and administration. Work left the Interior Department just
after this report was issued and could not implement any of its
recommendations. Serious Indian policy reforms did not occur until passage in
1934 of the Indian Reorganization Act.
Work resigned his Interior Department post in July 1928 to lead the effort to
nominate Herbert Hoover (1874-1964) for the Republican presidential ticket.
After this success, Hoover appointed Work to manage his election campaign as
chairman of the Republican National Committee. Following Hoover's election
victory, Work retired from politics at the age of sixty-nine and returned to
Denver, Colorado, to practice medicine. His wife, Laura M. Arbuckle, whom he
married in 1887 and with whom he had five children, had died in 1924, and in
1933 he married Ethel Reed Gano. Work died in Denver. He is buried at
Arlington National Cemetery.
Bibliography
Work's papers are in the Colorado State Archives, Denver; the Postmaster General Files,
National Archives, Washington, D.C.; and the Speech and Office Files, Department of the
Interior Records, National Archives, Washington, D.C. Other papers are in the Warren G.
Harding Papers, State Historical Society, Columbus, Ohio; Calvin Coolidge Papers,
Library of Congress; and Herbert Hoover Papers, Hoover Library, West Branch, lowa. See
also Eugene P. Trani, "Hubert Work and the Department of the Interior, 1923-1928,"
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Work, Hubert (1860-1942), physician and secretary of the interior I American National Biography
Pacific Northwest Quarterly 61 (Jan. 1970): 31-40; Eugene P. Trani, The Secretaries of the
Department of the Interior, 1849-1969 (1975); Von Gayle Hamilton, Work Family History
(1969); Janet A. McDonnell, The Dispossession of the American Indian, 1887-1934 (1991);
Kenneth R. Philp, John Collier's Crusade for Indian Reform, 1920-1954 (1977); and Donald
C. Swain, Federal Conservation Policy, 1921-1933 (1963). Obituaries are in the New York
Times, 15 Dec. 1942; the Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 97 (1943): 382-83; and
the Journal of the American Medical Association, 120 (1942): 1332.
See also
Harding, Warren Gamaliel (1865-1923), twenty-ninth president of the United States
Hays, Will H. (1879-1954), motion picture industry official, lawyer, and politician
Fall, Albert Bacon (1861-1944), secretary of the interior
Hoover, Herbert Clark (1874-1964), engineer, philanthropist, and thirty-first president
of the United States
Copyright © Oxford University Press 2021.
Printed from American National Biography. Under the terms of the licence agreement, an
individual user may print out a single article for personal use (for details see Privacy Policy and
Legal Notice).
date: 27 August 2021
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5/5
had done that which
) contemplate.
NOTICE: This material may
be protected by copyright law.
(Title 17 U.S. Code)
Hubert Work (1860-1942)
vow abstention from
with such posers, para-
and the Department of the Interior, 1923-28
r at contemplating a
i, SO mortifying, so
y obscene, drove all
self-sacrifice from our
BY
EUGENE
P.
TRANI
were washed away in
uld only repeat, with
HUBERT WORK was one of the most important
from 1913 to 1919. All the while he continued
heathen sacrifice.
officials in the administrations of Presidents
practicing medicine; in addition, he served as
al yokes of flowers,
Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge, but as
president of the Colorado State Medical Society
an official he has remained relatively unknown.
and then of the American Medico-Psychological
al. It lies with us, and
His career was marked by service as postmaster-
Association. During the First World War he rose
unformed spirits, to
general and as secretary of the interior between
to the rank of colonel, while supervising medical
which are poisoning
the years 1922 and 1928. He was clearly an indi-
aspects of the draft.
ern literature at the
vidual of much significance, particularly because
Work's organizational talents, as well as his
not yet appeared, but
of his service with the Department of the Interior.
Republican tendencies, were well known by 1920,
We have had a vision,
Yet his activities are generally unrecorded, his
and during the presidential campaign that year,
boldly to prophesy his
accomplishments unheralded.
National Chairman Will Hays named him to
en in this darkest and
Little in Work's background seemed to prepare
organize farmers in support of the Harding-
the mountain tops of
him for a career in politics. He was born on a
Coolidge ticket. Work joined in the task with
farm at Marion Center, Pennsylvania, on July 3,
enthusiasm, and after Harding's overwhelming
1860, and attended local schools. Following grad-
victory over James M. Cox, he planned to return
ner, torn, but flying,
uation from what was then the Indiana (Pennsyl-
to Colorado, 2
d against the wind!
vania) State Normal School, he studied medicine
But Work was not to return to the practice of
and graduated from the University of Pennsyl-
medicine for many years. He was named first
vania Medical School in 1885. He went west to
assistant postmaster-general, a position which
seek his fortune, settled first in Greeley, Colorado,
enabled him to continue his relationship with
where he began to practice medicine, and then
Hays, who took over the Post Office Department.
moved to Pueblo, where he founded the Wood-
Work's service as first assistant postmaster-general
croft Hospital for mental diseases in 1896 and
managed the local hospital until he entered the
1 For a brief biography of Work, as well as an exten-
sive bibliography on him, see Eugene P. Trani, "The
army during the First World War.1
Secretaries and Under Secretaries of the Department of
Work early exhibited an interest in the Repub-
the Interior,' unpublished manuscript, copies in the
d he pleads for continuity
Department of the Interior Library and in the Interior
lican party. He participated in local politics,
e is concerned that renova-
Department Records, Record Group 48, National Archives.
continuity held by shop-
became chairman of the state Republican con-
This manuscript IS currently being revised for publication.
vention of Colorado in 1908, and in that same
For Work's explanation as to the role of an M.D. in
that it will work needless
public life, see Hubert Work, "The Physician in Public
rs who cannot afford to be
year was a delegate to the national Republican
Life," speech before the Medical Club, Philadelphia,
time. He points out that
convention that nominated William Howard
April 20, 1923, copy in Box 1, Work Speech File, Interior
onsideration would "elimi-
Taft for the presidency. A staunch party man, he
Department Records, Record Group 48, National Archives
(hereafter cited Work Speech File).
move the residents of the
opposed the progressive split and continued with
2 As an indication of Work's support for Harding, see
environmental setting of
the regular Republicans. He became chairman of
Work to Warren G. Harding, July 29, 1920, Box 507,
the State Republican Committee and was a
Warren G. Harding Papers, Öhio Historical Society,
warm book, one that will
Columbus (hereafter cited Harding Papers). For evidence
member of the Republican National Committee
of Work's satisfaction with Harding's campaign, see Work
nd all who know the mar-
to Will Hays, Aug. 18, 1920, Will Hays Papers, Indiana
ould be in the library of
EUGENE P. TRANI is professor of history at Southern Illinois
Historical Society, Indianapolis. There is a good deal of
what has been.
Work's correspondence with Hays concerning the 1920
University and visiting research fellow at The Papers of
election in the Hays Papers. See also letter from Work to
ELIZABETH SUTTON GUSTISON
Woodrow Wilson, Princeton University. He is currently
Harding, Oct. 3, 1920, Box 525, Harding Papers, in which
working on a study of "The United States, Manchuria, and
Work noted what had been done for the farmers by the
the Open Door, 1905-1921."
Republicans.
RTHWEST QUARTERLY
JANUARY 1970
31
Pacific Northwest Quarterly Jan. 1970. Vol. 61 31-40.
was brief and generally uneventful. He was
Thomas E. Campbell of Arizona was the person
Al
interested in organizational matters, served as
who was most frequently recommended, and he
Presi
liaison between his department and Congress, and
had powerful support. Governors Samuel
other
supervised the preparation of a new edition of
McKelvie of Nebraska, Ben W. Olcot' of Oregon,
want
postal laws and regulations. Hays resigned in
William D. Stephens of California, G. Scrug.
with
January, 1922, to become head of the National
ham of Nevada, Henry J. Allen of Kansas, J.F.
deep
Association of Motion Picture Producers and
Hinkle of New Mexico, Joseph M. Dixon of
trust
Distributors. Work served for two months as
Montana, and Charles R. Mabey of Utah, were
Hard
acting postmaster-general, while the President
among the many who favored Campbell. Other
as
F
was searching for a successor to Hays. In the end
candidates were Governors D. W. Davis of Idaho
Indi
Harding chose Work to succeed Hays, probably
and Dixon of Montana, Congressman Frank
not only because there was substantial Congres-
Mondell of Wyoming, Senator Miles Poindexter
sional support for Work. but also because the
of Washington, and Secretary of Commerce Her.
THE
President knew Work and appreciated his efforts
bert Hoover. There was even a telegram from
bese
in the 1920 election
3
Governor William E. Sweet of Colorado which
beca
Work became postmaster-general of the United
supported Work for the job.
as W
States on March 4, 1922. Although he served for
ings
little more than one year, he left a mark upon the
department. He was particularly concerned with
Hays to Harding. March 28. 1921. Box 37. Harding
Work
businesslike efficiency in government operations,
Papers. in which Hays asked the President to sign Work's
Speec
commission; Postal Laws and Regulations Applicable to
postn
and he stressed two ideas: the government should
Post Office Clerks and City Carriers (Washington, D.C.,
consis
own, rather than lease, post-office buildings; and
1921), prepared under the direction of Hubert Work,
from
first assistant postmaster-general, Nov. I, 1921. See Boxes
Ma
appointments of postmasters should be on the
38, 39, and 40, Harding Papers, for the letters of support
Depa:
basis of ability, not politics.4
for candidates, such as those favoring Walter S. Dickey,
the
It is not surprising that, after the resignation of
editor of the Kansas City Daily Journal, Charles Dawes
was
of Chicago, R. B. Creager. Republican state chairman of
the SI
Albert B. Fall in March, 1923, Harding appointed
Texas, and Senator Harry S. New of Indiana.
the
P
Work secretary of the interior. This was by no
Harding was barraged by letters from at least thirty
1922,
seven congressmen and five senators, all calling for Work's
See
means a casual move on Harding's part. Fall, a
promotion. Prominent among the writers were Senators
Unite
former senator from New Mexico, was a contro-
Charles E. Townsend of Michigan, chairman of the
Abstr
versial secretary of the interior, and many expo-
Committee on Post Offices and Postal Roads, Lawrence
5B
C. Phipps of Colorado, Thomas Watson of Georgia, and
good
nents of conservation had been calling for him
Tasker L. Oddie of Nevada. Among the congressmen
Hard
to leave the cabinet. Fall believed that the West's
were Guy Hardy of Colorado, Charles Kearns of Ohio,
spon
land, timber, and minerals should be exploited.
Charles Curry of California. and James G. Strong of
some
Kansas. Work had gained this support as the Congres-
Hard
During his term as secretary of the interior, he
sional liaison man for the Post Office Department. See the
Fall
supported the transfer of the Forest Service from
letters to Harding from Townsend. Jan. 19. 1922, Phipps,
Domo
Jan. 17. 1922, Watson, Jan. 19. 1922. Oddie, Jan. 19, 1922,
1955)
the Department of Agriculture to Interior, albeit
Hardy, Jan. 14. 1922, Kearns, Jan. 14. 1922. Curry. Jan.
without success, and he attempted to help private
18. 1922, Strong. Feb. 25. 1922. and the many others in
tion
Box 39. Harding Papers.
Wom
concerns while he was on the Federal Power
There was some opposition to the appointment of
Hall
Commission. By 1923 Fall was dissatisfied. He had
Work. Much of it came, not unexpectedly, from such
Socie
entered the cabinet as a friend of the new Presi-
organizations as the Michigan State Osteopathic Associa-
in B
dent and expected to be a close adviser. His
tion, the Missouri Chiropractic College, and the Kansas
McK
Association of Chiropractory, all no doubi horrified at
Jan.
influence with Harding seemed to be slipping;
the possibility of a president of the American Medical
1923,
he disliked having outsiders interfere with his
Association- which olice Work was elected in 1921-
1923,
department, and he was tired of the attacks by the
attaining cabinet status. See the letters to the President
Sweet
from the Michigan State Osteopathic Association. Feb. 3,
rest
ardent conservationists. He decided to resign, and
1922, Missouri Chiropractic College, Feb. 20. 1922, Kansas
Pape
by early 1923 this decision was virtually public
Association of Chiropractory. Feb. 25. 1922. and others
Fall's
opposing the appointment in Box 39, Harding Papers.
Box
knowledge.5
There are many letters and telegrams congratulating
befor
For Harding, as yet unaware of the Teapot
Work on his appointment as postmaster-general in Box
from
Dome oil scandal, the choice of a new secretary
7. Hubert Work Papers, Colorado State Archives, Denver
exam
(hereafter cited Work Papers).
of the interior was an important appointment.
Work to Harding, May 17, 1922, Work Postmaster
Hard
General Files, Post Office Department Records, Record
Hard
He knew that Fall's policies had been unpopular
Group 28, National Archives; Work to Joint Commission
other
and that public estimation of the department had
on Postal Service, Aug. 21, 1922, and Harding to Work,
letter
to be improved. The White House was flooded
Aug. 24, 1922, Box 38, Harding Papers, for Work's ideas
with recommendations for successors to Fall.
on post office sites.
For his beliefs on the selection of postmasters,
Conservation clubs and organizations urged the
Post Office Department press release, Jan. 8. 1923. Box 39,
Depa
President to use great care. Former Governor
Harding Papers; Work press release, Feb. 28. 1923. and
32
PACIFIC NORTHWEST QUARTERLY
JANI
Arizona was the person
the recommendations had little effect on the
of Secretary Fall's involvement in the Teapot
recommended, and he
President, who seems to have considered no one
Dome scandal.
Governors
Samuel
R.
other than Postmaster-General Work. Harding
It is interesting to see how Work dealt with the
n W. Olcott of Oregon,
wanted a man who was in touch and sympathy
confusions of his new office. He instituted an
California,
J.
G.
Scrug.
with the "great West which is SO intimately and
"open door" policy: anyone having business
Allen of Kansas, J.
deeply concerned." He also wanted a man he
could see him. He displayed attractive working
Joseph
M.
Dixon
of
trusted. All these considerations pointed to Work.
habits; he arrived at his desk early, stayed late,
Mabey of Utah, were
Harding moved him to Interior, replacing him
and studied his department. It might seem that
'ored Campbell. Other
as postmaster-general with Harry S. New of
such tactics as he employed were uncomplicated
S Davis of Idaho
Indiana.
to the point of simplicity. Sometimes-perhaps
Congressman Frank W.
the historian may be permitted this naive obser-
ator
Miles
Poindexter
vation-the best approach to confusion is sim-
tary of Commerce Her.
THE NEW SECRETARY inherited a department
plicity, and Work (I would urge) thereby showed
even a telegram from
beset by infighting and assaulted from the outside
himself a man of judgment. He was, of course,
eet of Colorado which
because it was considered corrupt and inefficient
quickly able to gain the confidence of his em-
b.6
as well as the enemy of conservation, These feel-
ployees.
ings were heightened with the gradual disclosure
Work was clear about what he wanted from his
new employees, and he sent a long memorandum
28, 1921. Box 37. Harding
Work to Richard H. Dana, March 26, 1923, Box 3, Work
to them on March 27, 1923. He was concerned
e President to sign Work's
Speech File. See also the material on the selection of
Regulations Applicable to
postmasters in Box 12, Work Papers. This latter material
about the public appearance of the department.
Carriers (Washington, D.C.,
consists of correspondence between Harding and Work
He noted that
irection of Hubert Work,
from 1922 and 1923 concerning postmasters.
il, Nov. 1. 1921. See Boxes
Many of Work's ideas about running the Post Office
Underlying every governmental activity is the idea of
i, for the letters of support
Department were followed after he became secretary of
service to the people. It is the only excuse for the existence
favoring Walter S. Dickey,
the interior. Thus, while his term as postmaster-general
of your job and my job, and if we acquire the habit of
ly Journal, Charles Dawes
was brief, his influence was not small, particularly on
considering the public as a necessary evil incident to our
publican state chairman of
the subject of economy in government. Expenditures for
ew of Indiana.
employment, we fail to justify our continuance in office.
the Post Office Department in 1921 were $620,993,000; in
letters from at least thirty.
1922, when Work headed the department, $545,644,000.
We cease to be public servants and become, instead, one
ators, all calling for Work's
See U.S. Bureau of the Census, Historical Statistics of the
of a class of petty bureaucrats.8
the writers were Senators
United States, Colonial Times to 1957: A Statistical
ichigan, chairman of the
Abstract (Washington, D.C., 1960), 496.
He observed that every person who had business
d Postal Roads, Lawrence
By this time, Work was also giving the president a
with the department had the right to be heard
as Watson of Georgia, and
good deal of political advice. See, for example, Work to
Among the congressmen
Harding, May 29, 1922, Box 38, Harding Papers. Corre-
and was entitled to courteous and complete ex-
Charles Kearns of Ohio,
spondence in Boxes 13, 14, 15, and 16, Work Papers, gives
planations.
and James G. Strong of
some indication of political activities of Work in the
Work had become disturbed at the manner in
S support as the Congres-
Harding and Coolidge administrations. A good study of
Office Department. See the
Fall is David H. Stratton's "Albert B. Fall and the Teapot
which Interior employees answered letters, often
end, Jan. 19. 1922. Phipps,
Dome Affair," Ph.D. dissertation (University of Colorado,
"ignoring the sensibilities of the correspondent."
1922, Oddie, Jan. 19, 1922,
1955).
Jan. 14. 1922, Curry, Jan.
6 Mrs. Charles C. Marshall, chairman of the Conserva-
He noted that, "by failing to respond fully to his
and the many others in
tion Committee of the New York City Federation of
[the writer's] inquiry, or by overlooking its pur-
Women's Clubs, to Harding, Jan. 6, 1923, Edward H.
port, a positive affront is offered, just as though
n to the appointment of
Hall of the American Scenic and Historic Preservation
unexpectedly, from such
Society to Harding, Jan. 16, 1923, and many other letters
the letter writer were wilfully uncivil." He be-
State Osteopathic Associa-
in Box 24, Harding Papers; telegrams to Harding from
lieved that such practices were building resent-
C College. and the Kansas
McKelvie, Jan. 7, 1923, Olcott, Jan. 7, 1923, Stephens,
ment, and, in order to regain public confidence,
all no doubt horrified at
Jan. 7, 1923, Hinkle, Jan. 9, 1923, and Mabey, Jan. 16,
of the American Medical
1923, ibid.; letters to Harding from Scrugham, Jan. 8,
he asked his employees to write "considerate,
ork was elected in 1921-
1923, Allen, Jan. 8, 1923, and Dixon, Jan. 10, 1923, ibid.;
intelligent letters to effect this purpose." Expres-
ne letters to the President
Sweet to Harding (telegram), Jan. 13, 1923, as well as the
pathic Association, Feb.
rest of the recommendations, Boxes 24-26, Harding
sions such as "so far as this Department is con-
llege, Feb. 20. 1922, Kansas
Papers. For an indication that Harding was aware of
cerned the case is closed," "said contact," "you are
Feb. 25, 1922, and others
Fall's unpopularity, see Harding to M. Allis, June 5, 1922,
advised," and "in reply beg to state," had to go.9
Box 39, Harding Papers.
Box 24, Harding Papers. In this letter, written well
I telegrams congratulating
before Fall's resignation, the President defended Fall
The secretary suggested that each bureau
postmaster-general in Box
from charges made by Allis. This was not an isolated
be identified with the Interior Department, "be-
ado State Archives, Denver
example.
7 Harding to C. S. Thomas, Jan. 15, 1923, Box 24,
cause, strange as it may seem, many people
7. 1922, Work Postmaster-
Harding Papers. There is no indication at all in the
believe that some of the bureaus are independent
partment Records. Record
Harding Papers that the President considered anyone
establishments." He mentioned all of this because
Work to Joint Commission
other than Work for the job, notwithstanding the many
22. and Harding to Work,
letters of support he received for other candidates. There
he wanted to "bring the important work of the
g Papers, for Work's ideas
are many letters and telegrams congratulating Work on
Interior Department before the people of the
his appointment to Interior in Box 9, Work Papers.
country, and this can only be done by crediting
ection of postmasters, see
8 Work to All Officers and Employees of the Interior
please, Jan. 8, 1923. Box 39.
Department, March 27, 1923, Box 3, Work Speech File.
to the Department all bureau activities." He
release, Feb. 28, 1923, and
Ibid.
closed this memorandum of introduction by
RTHWEST QUARTERLY
JANUARY 1970
33
stating that "We are out to make friends for the
of the Department of Agriculture in April, 1923
Interior Department."10
he noted that the Departments of Agriculture and
Work believed that much of the reputation of
Interior were accomplishing much by mutual
his department was undeserved and that some
cooperation-an obvious attempt to reduce the
policies had been badly presented. In a letter to
current conflict between the departments that
Mrs. Albert B. Fall after the Teapot Dome affair
almost resembled the Ballinger-Pinchot
contro-
had been exposed, he noted that the Falls still
versy of a dozen or SO years earlier. He noted that
had much influence and many friends
both departments could do more. 13
who have remembered you through all of your trouble
Work favored the Harding reorganization
and sympathized with you because of the annoyances that
plans and stated that "no student of economics
have been injected into your life.
[The] common
will dispute the incalculable benefits to be
ac.
enemy to good government still has its eye on this Depart-
crued through a logical re-allocation of Govern
ment every day, watching for some place to get a hold. The
minority party is distraught for want of a campaign issue,
ment services." He emphasized that Interior and
and those sympathizing with it are always on the watch
Agriculture were parts of a "great Government,
for something to make material out of. All of this you
not miniature Governments in themselves, and
know and remember and is not worth repeating. 11
therefore both departments are obligated to con-
tribute through mutual cooperation to the suc.
Perhaps Work summed up his administrative
cessful administration of the Government as a
bent best when he wrote in 1925 that he had been
whole." He thought that the government should
trying "to put a new face on the Department of
be reorganized so that related services were in one
the Interior, which has heretofore been regarded
department, "and the line between interlocking
as a depot of high explosives, for the Administra-
services should be clearly defined so that equip-
tion."12
ment, employees, bureaus, and divisions of the
Secretary Work then attacked the problems
Government departments may not be dupli-
facing the department. He thought that in gen-
cated. "14
eral the federal government was inefficient, and
For his own department Work brought in
he was convinced that before the Department of
many new employees from the business world. He
the Interior could come to grips with policy, it
transferred personnel work into the secretary's
had to be reorganized. He believed that business
office and abolished the system whereby each
methods should be applied to government, for the
bureau maintained a separate appointment divi-
government was the biggest business in the
sion. In such minor matters as mimeographing
country. From the outset he stressed greater
papers within the department, he found a state of
efficiency. Speaking before a group of employees
confusion and resolved it. Before he took office,
Colorado State Archives
Hubert Work
34
PACIFIC NORTHWEST QUARTERLY
culture in April, 1923,
six bureaus had duplicating sections, with a total
reforms was to bring all the Washington bureaus
ents of Agriculture and
of forty-three employees, each averaging about
of
the department together in a single location,
ng much by mutual
34,500 impressions monthly. He created one
what is now General Services Administration.
attempt to reduce the
duplication division of twenty-two employees,
Work was quick to tell the President about the
the departments that
monthly average rose to 53,500 impressions.
money his department was saving; the secretary
linger-Pinchot contro-
This division also provided quicker service.15
was too political an individual not to sense the
earlier. He noted that
Another way to cut expenditures and increase
need to advertise his efforts. He submitted annual
more. 13
efficiency, Work decided, was to let out for con-
reports to the White House, to show changes in
arding reorganization
tract in competitive bidding as many jobs as
organization and methods, and frequently noted
student of economics
possible. The department had fallen into the
that his department's budget was not getting out
ble benefits to be ac.
practice of doing field work by "force account,"
of hand. It was, in fact, decreasing: department
-allocation of Govern.
which meant that "instead of private contractors
appropriations in 1922 were $342 million; in
ized that Interior and
being awarded contracts for the construction, it
1923, $327 million; and in 1924, $325 million.
a "great Government,
is done by the bureau engineers, who purchase
He also pointed to the fact that he was striving
its in themselves, and
the necessary equipment, hire the labor and man-
to reduce the department staff, while increasing
S are obligated to con-
age the job." The secretary opposed this proce-
services; in 1925 alone the staff in Washington
poperation to the suc-
dure because it was inefficient and because it
and in the field decreased by almost 2,000 em-
the Government as a
meant that the government was getting into busi-
ployees. 17
he government should
ness
"by
itself
and
for
itself."
Another
of
Work's
Work probably devoted more time to organiza-
ed services were in one
tion. and attained more success. than any secre-
between interlocking
10 Work to All Officers and Empioyees of the Interior
tary of the interior since James R. Garfield, who
defined SO that equip-
Department, March 27, 1923, Box 3, Work Speech File.
served in Theodore Roosevelt's Administration.
and divisions of the
11 Work to Mrs. Albert B. Fall, Aug. 1, 1925, Box 2,
Calvin Coolidge, Harding's successor, must have.
may not be dupli-
Work Office File, Interior Department Records, Record
found such activity impressive. He appreciated
Group 48, National Archives (hereafter cited Work Office
File).
economy; in one of his presidential messages, he
nt Work brought in
Work to Robert Sterling Yard, Nov. 18, 1925, Box 2,
announced that economy was the most practical
the business world. He
Work Office File.
form of idealism.
13 Work to Employees of the Department of Agricul-
k into the secretary's
ture, Washington, D.C., April 13, 1923, copy in Box 1,
system whereby each
Work Speech File.
14 Ibid.
rate appointment divi-
DURING THE 1920's the Department of the Interior
15 Work to H. M. Lord, director of the Bureau of the
ers as mimeographing
Budget, Oct. 23, 1925, Box 1, Work Office File.
was essentially a department of conservation and
ent, he found a state of
16 Work to Associated General Contractors of America,
public works It was therefore necessary for the
Before he took office
Jan. copy in Box 1, Work Speech File.
new secretary to make clear his attitude on
17 Work to Harding, May 12, 1923, Box 23, Harding
Papers; Work to Calvin Coolidge, March 13, 1924, Case
conservation. Work set forth his ideas in a series
File 6, Calvin Coolidge Papers, Library of Congress
of speeches and published statements. In a speech
(hereafter cited Coolidge Papers); E. C. Finney, first
at American Falls, Idaho, in 1925, he noted that
assistant secretary of the interior, to Lord, Jan. 5, 1926,
and Work to Lord, Aug. 19, 1927, Box 1, Work Office
during the Taft Administration the country had
File; press release of the Department of the Interior,
been disturbed by a "wordy war between ex-
Dec. 5, 1927, Case File 6, Coolidge Papers.
Work also made sure the public was aware of how
tremists, discussing conservation." The East, he
the department had changed, how much money was
said, had sought "to lock up through legislation
being saved, and exactly what the department was doing
the wealth of the West for use of succeeding gen-
for America. Some of this information appeared in the
annual reports of the secretary of the interior, 1923 to
erations." Many Westerners resented the "strong
1929. Even more important are three pamphlets: The
armed action," and personal attacks and bitter-
Department of the Interior: A Review for 1925 (Wash-
ness developed, even "between employees of
ington, D.C., 1925); A Federal University for the People
(Washington, D.C., 1926); and The Department of the
different Departments of the Government that
Interior: A Three Years' Review (Washington, D.C., 1926).
only within the last four years has begun to
Work also made sure Coolidge was aware of these pam-
subside."
phlets. See, for example, Coolidge to Work, Oct. 8, 1926,
Box 6, Work Papers, in which the President thanked Work
Work hoped to avoid such controversy and to
for the three-year review.
apply the principles of efficiency to natural re-
the midst of the New Deal, Harold L. Ickes,
FDR's secretary of the interior. proposed to change the
sources. He believed in wise use of the resources
name of his department to the Department of Conserva-
"as well as preservation for future needs." The
Hubert Work
tion and Works. For an analysis of Ickes, as well as his
American economy had in the past advanced by
Tosing battle, see Eugene P. Trani, "Conflict or Com-
promise: Harold L. Ickes and Franklin D. Roosevelt,"
the liberal "and often reckless" use of natural
North Dakota Quarterly, Vol. 36 (Winter, 1968), 20-29.
resources, Work said, and he urged
19 Work at the Construction of American Falls Reser-
voir, American Falls, Idaho, July 13, 1925, copy in Box 1.
a more thorough and intelligent conversion of our remain-
Work Speech File (also in Box 3, Work Papers).
ing natural wealth to industrial necessities. Nothing can
:THWEST QUARTERLY
JANUARY 1970
35
justify reckless use of our people's inheritance from
farmers would be able to repay or that the cost of
Interi
Nature or other encroachments upon the capital of our
operation and maintenance would be too heavy
result,
future generations [:] while the Federal Government is
a burden for the water users. Proposed projects
rapidly reducing its indebtedness, cities, counties and
missio
States are mortgaging themselves for the next generation.2
were to be examined not only for engineering,
explar
but also for soil, climate, markets, crops. In
noted
Thus, Work clearly was a conservationist.
In
brief, he told department officials that they
an interview by the United Press News Service,
agenc
should "establish a real, actual and helpful work-
wastel
he advocated conservation as a "controlling
ing cooperation with the farmer to aid him in
vise (
national policy." In two speeches in California in
every phase and aspect of production and market-
reclair
1927, he noted that mineral deposits, timber
ing of crops." He also urged that all government
feasib
supplies, streams, soils, and even ranges were
irrigation projects be put under the control of
the R
being exhausted. He warned that the period of
local water users. 24
struct
exploitation of resources, at least as far as the
The secretary appointed special advisers, the
divide
government was concerned, had passed. 21
so-called Fact Finders, who undertook a reexami-
distril
The public land grabs of the last century are a soiled
nation of reclamation policy. Many weaknesses
The t
page in our history, but the remaining public domain is
of the old system appeared. Of special concern
lands
protected for future generations. Our public coal deposits
to Work was the fact that some individuals who
every
were shamelessly exploited during the last century, but
had been induced to settle on new land had
"the
since 1906 Government coal lands have been withdrawn
from entry and protected by leasing. 22
been given misleading and insufficient informa-
Burea
tion as to the conditions which they later were
the re
His policy was to make conservation the law of
compelled to meet 25
Th
the land. By these statements the Secretary was
There was controversy over the new ideas, and
how 1
not only improving the reputation of his depart-
Coolidge advised Work that it might be well for
noted
ment, but he was educating Americans as to the
the secretary to make a public statement explain-
reclan
seriousness of the crisis and proclaiming the
ing reclamation law and the way in which the
years
Department of the Interior as the leader of the
conservation movement. In this respect there was
20 Work at the Construction of American Falls Reser-
certainly a great distance between the views of
Coolid
voir, July 13. 1925, copy in Box 1. Work Speech File.
Nov. 2
Secretary Work and Albert B. Fall.
21 U.P. interview, "Our National Inheritance, October,
was al
Work was not just making speeches. He was
1926. Work before the Oakland Forum. March 24, 1927,
of the
Work before the Commonwealth Club, San Francisco,
also determined to establish a sound conservation
letters
March 25. 1927. Work, "Conservation's Need of Legal
ated ]
policy which would include his beliefs about
Advice." delivered at the Mineral Law Section of the
Utah.
efficiency and bureaucracy. He changed both the
American Bar Association meeting. Buffalo, Aug. 30,
tion D
1927, copies in Boxes 2 and 3. Work Speech File (copies
27 W
name of the reclamation agency-from the Rec-
of the Oakland and San Francisco speeches also in Box 3,
Chicag
lamation Service to the Bureau of Reclamation-
Work Papers). The Buffalo speech appeared in the
enne,
American Bar Association Journal, Vol. 13 (1927). 517-20.
and its head, replacing A. P. Davis with D. W.
Speech
Other published statements by the secretary were: "Have
Work
Davis, the former governor of Idaho, a move
We Wasted Our Material Birthright," Magazine of Wall
"Recla
which resulted in much controversy.2 23
Street (Sept. 11, 1926); "America Has Reason to Be
gation
Thankful," National Republic, Vol. 14 (November, 1926),
Then Work went into policy. On August 15,
1924),
5; and "Utilizing Our Natural Wealth," Nation's Business,
United
1923, he issued a memorandum-"The Tentative
Vol. 16 (May. 1928). 37-38.
Settlen
Policy of the Reclamation Bureau of the Depart-
The best secondary treatment of this whole subject is
Engine
Donald C. Swain, Federal Conservation Policy, 1921-1933
was Fe
ment of the Interior"-which dealt with both
(Berkeley, 1963). While his study does not deal at length
1924);
existing and new reclamation projects. Concern-
with Work, Swain points to the increased concern about
D.C.,
conservation in the 1920's, which Swain contends came
ing the former, Work called for reduction of
on Re
from the bottom up. Without a man such as Work as
1926).
overhead, introduction of business accounting,
secretary of the interior, it is doubtful that the movement
28
subdivision of large farms, diversification of crops,
would have been as successful as Swain shows that it was.
Coolid
22 Work before the Oakland Forum, March 24, 1927,
V
and establishment of profitable markets for the
Work before Commonwealth Club, San Francisco, March
Settler
products of farms. He asked reclamation officials
25. 1927, Boxes 2 and 3, Work Speech File (also in Box
Work
to "impress on water users the idea that the
3, Work Papers).
23 Work explained his move in a speech to the Ameri-
servati
Government money advanced for the construction
can Society of Civil Engineers, Aug. 13, 1923. a copy of
philos
of these projects was temporarily for their benefit
which, along with much other material about the contro-
Coolia
in the nature of a loan without interest." New
versy, is in Box 3, Work Office File.
is muc
24 Work memorandum, "The Tentative Policy of the
of the
projects to reclaim lands into profitable farms
Reclamation Bureau of the Department of the Interior,"
One i
were to be encouraged. Interior officials were to
Aug. 15, 1923, Box 3. Work Office File.
by the
recommend against projects costing SO much that
25 Work to D. W. Davis, Jan. 4, 1924, Box 3. Work
wester
Office File.
1920
there was no reasonable probability that the
26 Coolidge to Work. Sept. 16, 1924, Case File 6.
ment,
36
PACIFIC NORTHWEST QUARTERLY
JANUA
y or that the cost of
Interior Department was administering it. As a
the Government undertook on any scale." In this
would be too heavy
result, Work directed Elwood Mead, the com-
condition it had failed. The only chance for
Proposed projects
missioner of reclamation, to issue a general
success was to introduce the changes called for by
ly for engineering,
explanation of policy. In his statement, Mead
the Fact Finders: cooperation between federal
rkets, and crops. In
noted that the Reclamation Bureau was the
and state agencies; local management and opera-
officials that they
agency of the government charged with changing
tion of projects in order to halt inefficiencies
il and helpful work.
wastelands into farms. The bureau was to ad-
inherent in long-distance supervision; financial
mer to aid him in
vise Congress on the selection of areas to be
aid to help the settlers in their new operations;
duction and market.
reclaimed, make plans for the work, and estimate
discouragement of tenancy in favor of ownership;
that all government
feasibility. When the projects were authorized,
and selection of settlers to emphasize "character
ader the control of
the Reclamation Bureau was in charge of con-
and industry." Furthermore, prospective settlers
struction. Mead stated that the bureau then
who had had no experience were to receive
pecial advisers, the
divided the reclaimed land into farm units,
necessary training.2
ndertook a reexami-
distributed them, and arranged for settlement.
In July, 1925, following Coolidge's second visit
1. Many weaknesses
The bureau also sold water to owners of private
to western reclamation projects, Work wrote to
Of special concern
lands in the projects and advised farmers. "At
the President that the federal government should
me individuals who
every step of this development," Mead noted,
continue its interest in reclamation, despite
on new land had
"the Department of the Interior, through the
criticism, because private enterprise could not
insufficient informa-
Bureau of Reclamation, is held responsible for
do the job. Work told the President:
ich they later were
the results attained."26
The benefits which come from reclamation are indirect.
The secretary was more specific. He showed
They include increase [s] in taxable wealth, not only of
r the new ideas, and
how his policy differed from previous efforts. He
farms but of the towns which those farms create and sup-
it might be well for
noted in a speech given in 1925 that "Federal
port, increase [s] of population in thinly peopled areas, an
C statement explain-
reclamation was instituted about twenty-four
equalization in railway transportation; a cheapening of
e way in which the
years ago, the first purely socialistic enterprise
local food supplies which permits the operation of mines,
the better use of grazing lands, and the settlement of local
manufacturing industries. Private enterprise can not absorb
American Falls Reser-
these benefits but they justify Federal reclamation as a
1. Work Speech File.
Coolidge Papers; Elwood Mead to Frank H. Sterling,
public policy.28
I Inheritance, October,
Nov. 29, 1924, Box 3, Work Office File. By 1924 Coolidge
Forum. March 24, 1927,
was also receiving complimentary letters on the policy
Club, San Francisco,
of the secretary of the interior. See, for example, the
While economy ought to be dominant in recla-
letters to Coolidge from L. R. Taylor, chairman, Feder-
mation, Work believed that the new policy would
ration's Need of Legal
al Law Section of the
ated Reclamation Water Users Organization, Payson,
bring success. Reclamation was important be-
ing. Buffalo. Aug. 30,
Utah, Feb. 9, 1924, and from the Burley, Idaho, Irriga-
ork Speech File (copies
tion District, Feb. 11, 1924, Case File 6, Coolidge Papers.
cause, as he noted,
Work to the Development Agents of Railroads,
speeches also in Box 3,
no conservation policy, in its broad sense, that does not
eech appeared in the
Chicago, March 19, 1925, and speech delivered in Chey-
enne, Wyoming, June 22, 1925, copies in Box 1, Work
deal primarily with production of human food near to the
1, Vol. 13 (1927). 517-20.
Speech File (copy of the latter speech also in Box 3,
place of consumption is sound. The farmer's place in con-
e secretary were: "Have
Work Papers). Work's ideas were also made public in
servation is fundamental. All branches of human industry
ght." Magazine of Wall
"Reclaiming Reclamation: The Government's New Irri-
eventually trace back to the ground.
ca Has Reason to Be
gation Plan," Country Gentleman, Vol. 89 (Aug. 30,
ol. 14 (November, 1926),
1924), 8, 26-27, and Elwood Mead, "Present Policy of the
alth." Nation's Business,
Work's efforts in behalf of reclamation and
United States Bureau of Reclamation Regarding Land
Settlement," Proceedings of the American Society of Civil
conservation were somewhat offset by Coolidge's
of this whole subject is
Engineers, Vol. 52 (1926), 411-15. The Fact Finders report
vation Policy, 1921-1933
desire for small government expenditures. While
does not deal at length
was Federal Reclamation by Irrigation (Washington, D.C.,
increased concern about
1924); see also Federal Irrigation Projects (Washington,
interested in the development of water resources
D.C., 1926). Another interesting document is Conference
h Swain contends came
and reclamation, Coolidge was worried about the
man such as Work as
on Reclamation and Land Settlement (Washington, D.C.,
1926).
expense of such programs. The most important
btful that the movement
single project of this period was the development
Swain shows that it was.
28 Work to Coolidge, July 22, 1925, Case File 6,
Coolidge Papers.
Forum, March 24. 1927.
of the Colorado River Basin, which Secretary of
29 Work to the Conference on Reclamation and Land
b, San Francisco, March
Settlement, Washington, D.C., Dec. 14, 1925, copy in Box 1,
Commerce Herbert Hoover was more responsible
Speech File (also in Box
Work Speech File (also in Box 3, Work Papers).
for, but which Work of course vigorously sup-
30 The best account of Coolidge's attitude toward con-
a speech to the Ameri-
ported. Coolidge backed the Colorado River
servation, particularly as it resulted from his general
Aug. 13, 1923, a copy of
philosophy of government, is in Donald McCoy, Calvin
project, and while some charged that his interest
aterial about the contro-
Coolidge: The Quiet President (New York 1967). There
was only political, nonetheless the project was
File.
is much material about Work's efforts for the development
Tentative Policy of the
of the Colorado River Basin in Boxes 5 and 6, Work Papers.
authorized during his term. For a more extensive
rtment of the Interior,
One indication of the advances in reclamation is shown
reclamation and water-development program,
File.
by the fact that the number of irrigated farms in seventeen
4, 1924, Box 3. Work
the country had to wait until Hoover became
western states increased from 215,152 to 258,463 between
16,
1924,
Case
6.
1920 and 1930. See Historical Statistics, Abstract Supple-
President, but Work certainly pointed the De-
File
ment, 240.
partment of the Interior in the right direction.30
`HWEST QUARTERLY
JANUARY 1970
37
DURING WORK'S YEARS as secretary of the interior,
servation, he was also aware of the need
At the
to
two other matters of intensive conservation
preserve scenic resources and displayed much
park
syst
activity concerned the public grazing lands and
interest in the national park system. During his
that
the
oil deposits in the United States. Stock grazing
term, and with his encouragement, the idea that
the mor
on the public domain had become a serious
the parks were essentially a concern of the West
to obtait
problem by the 1920's, and Work was quick to
changed: the East was included to a greater
things o
point this out. He wrote to Coolidge in 1924
extent in the system. Work gave much support
understa
that unauthorized and unrestricted grazing was
the National Park Service, then still in its infancy.
the sche
destroying the public domain. He complained
Early in 1924 he wrote to Senator Duncan
dren.
that his department had introduced a bill into
Fletcher of Florida that the system was "made
There
Congress (Senate Resolution 2325, which would
up of areas enclosing scenery of quality so
claims,
control public-land grazing) only to have the
unusual and impressive, or natural features
so
tion of
Department of Agriculture lobby against it.
extraordinary as to possess national interest."
waters a
Agriculture contended that it should control
Size was not important, he noted, but the area
cures" 1
grazing, although Interior was responsible for
had to be susceptible to development "to make
governn
public lands. To Work this seemed to be a most
it accessible to the people, and of convenient
I do not
inefficient plan.
administration and control."3 Once established,
the publ
Secretary Work spoke publicly about the need
these areas had to be
fraud if
for legislation such as S.R. 2325. In a letter read
exploited
conserved in their natural state, untouched by the inroads
to the annual convention of the National Wool
of modern civilization so that coming generations, as
Anot
Growers Association, held in 1925 at San Fran-
well as the people of our own time, may be assured their
cisco, the secretary again emphasized the need
use for the purposes of recreation, education, and scientific
display
for control. He appealed to stock raisers to help
research.
36
human
one age
"the important and permanent preservation of
Work favored making these areas accessible, but
such re
pasturage on the public domain, which would
no more, a position most conservationists ac-
For m
otherwise soon disappear." He urged stockmen
cepted.
handlin
to support S.R. 2325 and pointed out that it was
a common-sense bill. He stressed the importance
31 Work to Coolidge, Nov. 22. 1924, Case File 6.
Speech
38
of cooperation, which would result
Coolidge Papers.
Wo
32 Work to F. R. Marshall, secretary of the National
Office F
in mutual benefit to the stockmen and the Department,
Wool Growers Association, Jan. 9, 1925, Box 2, Work
the Nat
and
insure
to
the
stockmen
a stability for the indus-
Office File.
about W
try, the necessity for which is becoming more and more
33 Work, "Public Lands," speech delivered before the
for exan
Western States Convention, Denver, Sept. 20. 1926, copy
Work
apparent each year.
in Box I, Work Speech File (also in Box 3, Work
Papers): Hubert Work, "Our Public Lands Question,"
Research
Work continued his campaign both in speeches
Mining Congress Journal, Vol. 12 (1926), 706-708, 762.
(Baltimo
and publications, but success eluded him. Al-
34 Work at Opening of Public Hearings Before Federal
displaye
Oil Conservation Board, Washington. D.C., Feb. 10, 1926,
ton, D.
though he failed in this venture, the Department
copy in Box I, and speech of the chairman of the
ington.
Federal Oil Conservation Board to Committee of Oil
ment ()
of the Interior did gain control of the public
Company Executives, Washington, D.C., May 23, 1927,
seconda
domain and its grazing aspects with the Taylor
copy in Box 2, Work Speech File (copy of the latter
of Indi:
Grazing Act of 1934, and Work must be given
speech also in Box 3, Work Papers). Another of Work's
for Ind
credit for increasing public awareness of the
speeches was published under the title View on Con-
331-54,
servation of Oil: Address before the Mineral Law
and Oti
problem.3
Section, American Bar Association, at Buffalo, August
1959),
(Norma
Secretary Work also helped to establish the
30, 1927 (Chicago, 1927). Box 8, Work Papers, contains
material on the Federal Oil Conservation Board and on
Federal Oil Conservation Board and served as
Work's activities with this board. Box 10, Work Papers,
Indian
its chairman. Other members were the secretaries
contains more documentation on oil. Box 17, Work
Box ]
of commerce, war, and the navy. This board,
Papers, contains much material on the controversial Salt
Creek Royalty Oil Contract, which for a time threatened
Office
created no doubt as a result of the controversy
42
to become another Teapot Dome scandal.
following the Teapot Dome scandals, encouraged
35 Work to Senator Duncan Fletcher, Jan. 14, 1924,
Haskel
Box 2. Work Office File. The number of national parks,
in Box
cooperation between government and the oil
Two
monuments, and allied areas increased during Work's term
industry, strove for improved practices, sought
as secretary of the interior from seventy-one in 1923 to
"Our
ninety-two in 1928, the number of acres from 8,790,000 in
196
discoveries of resources, and solved the long-
1923 to 10,359,000 in 1928, and the number of visits from
Man,
standing question of ownership of mineral de-
1,494,000 in 1923 to 3,025,000 in 1928. See Historical
posits on school lands of the public domain. It
Statistics, Abstract Supplement, 222.
ruled that with certain restrictions such deposits
36 Work to Fletcher, Jan. 14. 1924. Box 2, Work Office
of
File.
were the property of the state. 34
37 Work to Fifth National Conference on State Parks,
While Work was involved in promoting con-
Skyland, Virginia, May 25. 1925, copy in Box 1, Work
Box
PACIFIC NORTHWEST QUARTERLY
JANU
38
are of the need to
At the same time, Work hoped that the state
and from the beginning Work displayed sym-
and displayed much
park systems would expand, because he believed
pathy with and interest in the plans of reformers.
k system. During his
that the larger the outdoor movement became,
Characteristically, he began his activities with
gement, the idea that
the more opportunities Americans would have
administrative changes. He rebuilt the bureau
concern of the West
to obtain "momentary glimpses of the simpler
from top to bottom, dividing it into three
cluded to a greater
things of life, to increase our appreciation and
branches: finance, health, and routine field
gave much support to
understanding of Nature, to bring us closer to
services. He stressed benefits to the Indians,
en still in its infancy.
the scheme of creation and educate our chil-
expanded health activities, initiated a survey
to Senator Duncan
dren."
of the irrigation and reclamation of Indian
e system was "made
There had to be guarantees against fraudulent
lands, and requested that a private concern-the
enery of quality so
claims, he said, and he called for an appropria-
Institute for Government Research-recommend
r natural features so
tion of $25,000 to test the medicinal values of the
changes in Indian policy.
S national interest."
waters at Hot Springs, Arkansas, because "water
While the report of the Institute for Govern-
: noted, but the area
cures" had been advertised. He questioned the
ment Research was completed too late for Work
evelopment "to make
government's part in the Hot Springs venture:
to do much about it before he left office, he
3, and of convenient
I do not believe the Government should treat disease for
had anticipated most of the recommendations
"35 Once established,
the public, and it certainly should not lend itself to a
in the report. He believed that the department
fraud if it should be developed that these waters are being
had to redress wrongs done to the Indians by the
exploited without foundation in fact.³8
white men. He understood from the beginning
untouched by the inroads
that there could be no one Indian policy because,
coming generations, as
Another aspect of conservation in which Work
me, may be assured their
as he noted in a speech in 1923, "The various
1, education, and scientific
displayed much interest was the conservation of
tribes with their environments differ as much in
human resources, particularly in relation to the
their characteristics and languages as the nations
one agency of his department to be charged with
:
such responsibility: the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
of Europe and [are] no more amenable to a
areas accessible, but
For many years reforms in the government's
common policy of administrative government."
conservationists ac-
He pointed out that there were two schools of
handling of Indian affairs had been advocated,
thought regarding the Indian: some proposed
22. 1924, Case File 6,
Speech File (also in Box 3, Work Papers).
that he should be left alone, while others wanted
38 Work to H. M. Lord, May 20, 1924, Box 2, Work
to "educate, Christianize and Americanize him."
secretary of the National
Office File. Robert Sterling Yard, executive secretary of
9, 1925, Box 2, Work
the National Parks Association, was very complimentary
Work favored neither policy. He called for de-
about Work's efforts in behalf of the national parks. See,
centralization of many bureau activities in order
ech delivered before the
for example, Yard to Coolidge, Dec. 4, 1924, copy in Box
to permit those most familiar with local condi-
iver, Sept. 20, 1926, copy
2, Work Office File.
(also in Box 3, Work
39 The resulting report of the Institute for Government
tions to decide policies in cooperation with the
Public Lands Question,"
Research was The Problem of Indian Administration
local Indians.40
12 (1926), 706-708, 762.
(Baltimore, 1928). Work's interest in Indian affairs is
One thing Work was sure of:
Hearings Before Federal
displayed in pamphlets such as Indian Policies (Washing-
gton, D.C., Feb. 10, 1926.
ton, D.C., 1924), Indian Affairs in Oklahoma (Wash-
We cannot legislate the Indian into the White Man's
of the chairman of the
ington, D.C., 1925), and Medical Work of the Depart-
ways, nor train his footsteps by bureaucratic administra-
d to Committee of Oil
ment of the Interior (Washington, D.C., 1927). Good
tion of his affairs, alone. His future well-being lies in his
on, D.C., May 23, 1927.
secondary accounts of the movement to reform the Bureau
ability to become a member of the civilized structure of
File (copy of the latter
of Indian Affairs are Randolph C. Downes, "A Crusade
society which the times has built up around him.41
pers). Another of Work's
for Indian Reform, 1922-1934," MVHR, Vol. 32 (1945),
the title View on Con-
331-54, D'Arcy McNickle and Harold E. Fey, Indians
Education was important. "Amalgamation" was
fore the Mineral Law
and Other Americans: Two Ways of Life Meet (New York,
tion, at Buffalo, August
1959), and Oliver LaFarge, ed., The Changing Indian
a word the secretary stressed. The "problem of
3, Work Papers, contains
(Norman, 1942).
the Indian is to adapt himself to an artificial
inservation Board and on
Work to the Advisory Council of One Hundred on
d. Box 10, Work Papers,
Indian Affairs, Washington, D.C., Dec. 12, 1923, copy in
environment new to him," while keeping the
on oil. Box 17, Work
Box Work Speech File.
best aspects of his own.42 In this area, Work
on the controversial Salt
Work to E. J. Reynolds, Oct. 22, 1925, Box 1, Work
represented transition. He made progress, but a
ich for a time threatened
Office File.
e scandal.
42 Work at the dedication of the Athletic Stadium at
more complete departure from the old Indian
Fletcher, Jan. 14, 1924,
Haskell Institute, Lawrence, Kansas, Oct. 30, 1926, copy
policy would have to await the New Deal and the
umber of national parks,
in Box 2, Work Speech File (also in Box 3, Work Papers).
Wheeler-Howard Act.
eased during Work's term
Two published pronouncements of the secretary were
n seventy-one in 1923 to
"Our American Indians," Saturday Evening Post, Vol.
All the while Work preserved his political
of acres from 8,790,000 in
196 (May 31, 1924), 27, 92 ff., and "Assimilating the Red
position. He had good relations with the White
the number of visits from
Man," General Magazine and Historical Chronicle (Jan-
in 1928. See Historical
uary, 1926).
House: he was fond of Harding, got on well
222.
43 See, for example, the copies of Work's Lincoln Day
with Harding's successor, and became an impor-
1924, Box 2, Work Office
speeches of Feb. 12, 1925, and 1926, and copies of speeches
tant member of the Coolidge cabinet. He fre-
of Oct. 22, 26, and 29, 1926, Box 2, Work Speech File and
onference on State Parks,
Case File 6, Coolidge Papers (October speeches also in
quently went out stumping to carry the Republi-
5, copy in Box 1. Work
Box 3, Work Papers).
can message. 43
THWEST QUARTERLY
JANUARY 1970
39
But by mid-1928 Work was nearly sixty-eight
things-control of the United States
years old; he was tired of public life, felt that
Wood's career took him almost to the Presidence
he had done his share, and longed to return to
of the United States-he lost out to Harding
medicine. He resigned in July, 1928, and was
1920 during the nominating convention in
Chi-
succeeded by Roy Owen West. President Coolidge
cago. President Hoover appointed another
medi
wrote Work a long letter-at least by Coolidge's
cal doctor, Ray Lyman Wilbur, as secretary
standards-which included more than the usual
the interior. Perhaps medicine, dealing as it
pleasantries. He indicated that Work's conduct
with individuals, leads naturally to politics.
in office had always been "exceedingly satisfac-
although one must add that the requirements
tory," and he told the secretary that he had a
mid-20th-century medicine are SO complicated
right to much satisfaction from his contribution
that the public may look with increasing concern
Y
to public affairs: "I also wish to add my appre-
at nonmedical activities of physicians.
ciation of your constant and unfailing considera-
In another era, Hubert Work was able
to
tion toward me personally and your loyal coop-
enjoy importance in a public career. Although
S
eration in carrying out the policies of the admin-
his background was medicine, he could advocate
istration.
"44
the efficiency of business. Although he had
no
Work undertook one more public service be-
professional training in public relations-and
big
fore he returned to Colorado. During the years
could have none, given the lack of professionals
flas
from 1921 to 1928, Herbert Hoover, then secre-
in his time-he succeeded in bringing the De
wa
tary of commerce, had grown to respect Work.
partment of the Interior back into public favor.
The two became friends and frequently lunched
He understood conservation of natural resources,
WO
together. Believing that Hoover was the best
in part perhaps because as a doctor he had been
rhe
qualified man to continue the Harding-Coolidge
accustomed to the conservation of individuals,
policies, Work became one of the leaders of the
In his high office he proved a fit predecessor to
movement to win the Republican nomination
a later secretary, Harold L. Ickes, who from 1933
blai
for Hoover. Following the convention, Hoover
to 1946 would ensure the national interest in the
beli
projects which Hubert Work had begun.
any
appointed Work as chairman of the Republican
any
National Committee.45
tha
After November, 1928, Work returned to
Colorado, where he practiced medicine. He
44 Work to Coolidge. June 29. 1928. and Cooli e to
Th
remained interested, though not active, in politics,
Work, July 24. 1928. Case File 26. Coolidge Par S. In
sur
Box 6. Work Papers, there is a collection of Work-C lidge
suffering through Hoover's difficulties during the
letters covering the period 1923-26 and indicating the
an
depression and probably expressing horror at the
warm relationship between the two men. Box 12, Work
As
Papers. has material which indicates Work's efforts as
growth of bureaucracy during the New Deal. But
Am
early as August. 1923. to assure Coolidge the Republican
surely he must have viewed with gratification the
nomination of 1924.
tryi
improved reputation and the successes of the
45 There is much material on Work's efforts in the
me:
1928 election. Two contemporary, and biased. accounts
of
Department of the Interior. He died on Decem-
are R. Kevin Moore, Hubert Work: Word-Portrait of
per
ber 14, 1942.
the Man Who Will Conduct the Hoover-Curtis Cam-
far
It was quite a career, if one considers Work's
paign, Reprinted by Permission of the Author So That
the American Public May Know Intimately the Chair-
beginnings as an obscure doctor practicing medi-
man of the Republican National Committee (n.p., 1928),
cine from the late 1880's until the time of the
and Edward Rochester, Coolidge-Hoover-Work: An
Id:
Intimate Review of an Epochal National umpaign for
First World War. His rise to national prominence
the Presidency of the United States (Washington, D.C.,
pa
was slow. But each step in politics ensured the
1929). The Work Papers are a must for anyone studying
the
next, until at last he was appointed to a leading
the 1928 election. Box 8 contains copies of the speeches
Pr
Work gave during the 1928 campaign, as well as material
cabinet post.
tiv
from his activities with the Republican National Com-
Work's service to the government of the United
mittee. Box 12 contains a file of correspondence between
m:
States was in the great tradition of doctors of
Work and John J. Raskob. chairman of the Democratic
joi
National Committee, concerning conflict over statements
medicine who have moved beyond their routines
tic
made by both candidates in the 1928 election. Boxes
into the business of public affairs. Before World
14 and 15 contain the secretary's political correspondence
ar
from 1927 and 1928 relating to Work's efforts in behalf
War I, two medical doctors, Fred C. Ainsworth
of Hoover's candidacy and include one file on "Inception
of
and Leonard Wood, had fought for-of all
of Movement for Nomination of Herbert Hoover.
po
F.
Un
on
pos
40
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Series 2