History - Ferdinand A. Silcox, Fifth Chief, 1933-1939
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Ferdinand Augustus Silcox was born on Christmas Day in 1882, at Columbus,
Georgia. He graduated from the College of Charleston, South Carolina,
in 1903, with honors in chemistry and sociology. He went on to take
a masters degree in forestry from the Yale Forest School in 1905.
He served with the Forest Service in the northern Rockies after graduation.
Silcox entered the Engineer (Forestry) branch of the U.S. Army in
1917 as a captain, leaving as a major. He was selected to handle labor
problems at the shipyards in the Puget Sound and Columbia River districts
during much of World War I. After the war, Silcox worked in the private
sector for 11 years as a director of industrial printing relations
in Chicago and New York before being appointed as chief. The great
depression was in full swing when Silcox took over as chief; he
led the Forest Service during some of the most difficult times.
He was able to effectively help millions of unemployed workers deal
with the depression through the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
and Works Projects Administration (WPA) projects in the national
forests. The Forest Service provided space for the 200 man CCC camps,
thousands of work projects, and experienced project leaders. More
than two million unemployed young men enrolled in the CCC during
the nine years of its existence.
Extensive cooperation with the U.S. Army, Department of Labor,
and other federal and state land management agencies was needed
to get these programs to work effectively. His previous work for
the Army and in the private sector proved to be invaluable for getting
the job done. An able administrator, Silcox treated his associates
and subordinates with great consideration and kindness. He had an
enduring humanitarian viewpoint which resulted in doing his best
to help the "have nots" in society. His ideas of forest
conservation and advocacy of the public regulation of timber cutting
all brought strong opponents as well as loyal adherents.
Silcox's contributions to the forest conservation movement were
many, but especially significant was his success in focusing public
attention on the conservation problems of private forest land ownership.
The Forest Service also made a study of western range use and surveyed
forested watersheds for flood control. Under the Prairie States
Forestry Project, 217 million acres were planted by 33,000 plains
farmers.
Ferdinand A. Silcox wrote: Civilizations have
waxed and waned with their material resources; dwindling means of
livelihood have set rolling great tidal waves of migration and have
been a prolific cause of domestic disorder, class uprising, and
international war; but never before have the people of a great country
still rich in the foundations of prosperity sought to forestall
future disaster by applying a national policy of conservation of
which planned land use is the central core.
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