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

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Wright, George M-1904-1936
Weath sege M
1964-1936
National Park Service Founders: George Wright
Page 1 of 2
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NPS > History & Culture > People and the National Parks
George Melendez Wright - Father of Natural Resource Management
See For Yourself
Visit some of
For Teachers
Inside Story
the parks that
Where in the world
In 1929 George Wright
George Wright
is Tuzigoot? On-line
proposed that there be
dedicated his
teacher resources at
established a wildlife
field work
Acadia National Park
survey program for the
towards such
in cooperation with the
National Park Service,
as Pinnacles
George Wright
which would be funded
National
Society.
by him personally until
Monument in
the program's value
California, or Wright Mountain at Fort
could be demonstrated.
Union National Monument in New
Mexico, named after George Wright
Places
People
In 1927 George Wright joined the
Who was George Melendez Wright?
National Park Service as assistant park
Wright's contributions are distinguished by a
naturalist at Yosemite National Park.
keen perception of ecological problems: he
George Melendez Wright was born in
recognized that, even then, protected areas
San Francisco, California, June 20,
were not biological islands that can stand aloof
1904. At the University of California,
from the rest of the world. Importantly, he
Berkeley, he majored in forestry. More
also grasped the significance of long-term
places
human influences on the North American
landscape. More people
Stories
Preserving Nature in the National Parks
details the growth and development of the
Collections
park system during the 1920s, the rise of
Thomas Moran's vision of the
biological science within the Park Service, and
Western landscape was critical to the
the bureau's triumphs in recreational planning
creation of national parks. His pencil
and development during the New Deal, the
and watercolor field sketches and
ideas of George Wright began to take shape.
paintings captured the grandeur and
More stories
documented the extraordinary terrain
and natural features of great western
landscapes. More collections.
Preservation
In the tradition established George
Learn More
Wright, the Conservation Study
Institute was established to help the
A Remarkable Inheritance, Telling the Story of America's National
Park Service and its partners stay in
Parks
touch with the evolving field of
Explore the legacy of George Wright
conservation and develop more
sophisticated partnerships and new tools
and strategies. More preservation..
http://www.nps.gov/history/bestideapeople/wright.html
1/23/2010
National Park Service: Faunal
Page 1 of 1
Books
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
FAUNA
RAY LYMAN WILBUR, Secretary
OF THE NATIONAL PARKS
-
INITER STATES
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
HORACE M. ALBRIGHT, Director
Fauna Series No. 1
FAUNA
OF THE NATIONAL PARKS
Cover
OF THE
Contents
UNITED STATES
Foreword
Approach
A PRELIMINARY SURVEY
Methods
OF FAUNAL RELATIONS IN NATIONAL PARKS
Analysis
Conspectus
By
GEORGE M. WRIGHT, JOSEPH S. DIXON
Suggested Policy
BEN H. THOMPSON
Photographs by Joseph S. Dixon except otherwise indicted
CONTRIBUTION OF WILD LIFE SURVEY
FAUNA SERIES NO. 1 - MAY, 1932
OF
DEPARTMENT
THE
SECURITY
mancit
1840
UNITED STATES
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
WASHINGTON: 1933
History Links to the Past / National Park Service I Search Contact
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Last Modified: Tues, Feb 1 2000 07:08:48 pm PDT
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/fauna1/fauna.htm
ParkNet
National Park Service
http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/faunal/fauna.htm
1/23/2010
National Park Service: Faunal
Page 1 of 2
Altra Bank
FAUNA
Fauna of the National Parks
OF THE NATIONAL PARKER
-
of the United States
EXPERS STATES
CONSPECTUS OF WILD-LIFE PROBLEMS OF EACH
PARK
EASTERN PARKS
Fauna Series No. 1
Acadia and Great Smoky Mountains already form the nucleus of this
group which in the near future may include Shenandoah, Mammoth
Cave, Isle Royale, and the suggested Everglades national parks. The
Cover
conception of a chain of national parks in the densely populated
country east of the Mississippi River is a recent one. Their principal
Contents
function will be to preserve the fragrant restfulness of wilderness life
close to the great centers of industry and commerce.
Foreword
Approach
These eastern parks will never boast the massive grandeur or the
grotesque formation and fantastic coloration that abound in the parks
Methods
of the West. Theirs is a different, albeit just as pleasing, charm. It is
made of the beauty of lush grasses, of rioting autumn colors, of the
Analysis
varied hardwood forest, of spring flowers, of colorful birds, and of
hazy green-clothed mountains and the clearest sparkling waters.
Conspectus
The very essence of these parks will be their wild life, both plant and
Suggested Policy
animal. It will have to be carefully protected. The fauna particularly
has been ravished by several generations of unremittent hunting and
trapping. It will take additional years of careful nursing to restore its
primitive vigor.
The task can only be accomplished on the broad base of boundaries
that are adequate to wild life in the first place. The valuable, if sad,
experiences gained in the western parks caution the need for careful
preliminary investigation of faunal requirements before drawing
original boundaries.
In the faunal surveys of these parks relatively heavy emphasis will
fall on the work of determining the primitive wild-life picture and
tracing the influence of human history on the wild life. The original
picture has been obscured in a region SO long occupied, and the
maladjustments are correspondingly numerous.
Whereas the other parks of the group will have general biotic
similarities, Everglades is the exception that its name indicates. It
really belongs in a distinct group with itself as the only member.
Great Smoky Mountains and the Everglades were the only eastern
park projects visited in the preliminary survey.
http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/fauna1/fauna4d.htm
1/23/2010
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Wright, George M-1904-1936
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