The Prescott Forest Reserve, predecessor to the Prescott
National Forest, was established on May 10, 1898, by a proclamation issued
by President William McKinley. The Reserve consisted of 16 sections of land
laying southwest Prescott. Generally, its boundaries were Copper Basin on
the west, Aspen Creek on the east, Bootlegger Spring to the south, and Williams
Peak to the north. The establishment of the Reserve
came in response to the community's need to protect its domestic watershed;
the town's water plan called for dams to be constructed on Banning and Potts
Creeks. In 1891, Congress had passed legislation authorizing the president
to set aside from the public domain, forest reserves to protect timberlands
and watersheds. The Prescott Forest Reserve was the
second established in Arizona; the first was the Grand Ca–on Forest Reserve,
established in February, 1893.
The mountains surrounding Prescott had already been heavily
mined and its timber severely cut since 1863 when gold was discovered in
the Bradshaw Mountains. This, despite federal laws forbidding the cutting
of timber from the public domain. Timber could only be cut legally from
homesteads, mining claims,and private property. By 1898, most of the mature
timber had been stripped from the mountains and hillsides, sawed into timbers
and construction lumber, and transported to the mining operations. At
first, even the Reserve and the hiring of a Ranger was not protection enough.
Within a year after its establishment,approximately 1,000 additional trees
had been cut from it. In October, 1899, the Reserve was greatly enlarged
to offer additional protection for the timberlands. The Reserve then stretched
from Granite Mountain to the north to Black Canyon City to the south.
In 1908, the Reserve, renamed "Prescott National Forest,"
absorbed the Verde National Forest. The Verde National Forest was established
the previous year to protect the watershed of the Verde River. Over the
years, Forest boundaries have changed as land was turned back to the public
domain or traded with private owners to consolidate boundaries for easier
administration.
By the time the Prescott Forest Reserve was established,
almost all old-growth timber had been depleted by wildfire and severe cutting.
The trees around Crown King were gone; Big Bug Mesa was mostly devoid of
timber. The only mature trees remaining on the Forest were in Horse Thief
Canyon, an area which proved too difficult to log. Junipers and oaks on
the lower elevations were also heavily cut, these to supply fuelwood to
the mines' and smelters' insatiable boilers. Where
once there had been good stands of oak and juniper, by 1900 there were fewer
than one tree per acre. It was this much-depleted forest the first rangers
were called upon to protect.
Illegal timber cutting continued to be a problem for the
first few years, but it decreased significantly when the Reserve's boundaries
were better marked and the General Land Office issued regulations and procedures
for legally cutting timber from the public domain.
Until the Forest Reserves came under the administration
of Gifford Pinchot, supervisors and rangers were political appointees. Their
quality of leadership varied greatly. Within a relatively short period,
however, a competent staff was hired, despite very low salaries. A ranger's
salary was $60.00-90.00 per month, about half of which was required to feed
his horse. At the time, unskilled mine laborers in the area earned $2.50-3.00
per day; skilled labor received $4.00.
When Louis Barrett inspected the Reserve in 1904, he was
impressed with its 5 member staff. Frank Stewart, the Reserve's Supervisor,
was a good administrator, kept accurate records, and, very importantly,
was respected by the community.
Of Stewart's staff, several were promoted later to Regional
or Agency-wide positions. Leon F. Kneipp was thought
by Barrett to be one of the most efficient rangers in the Forest Service.
Kneipp later became supervisor for several national forests and eventually
served in the Washington Office as Assistant Chief, Division of Lands. C.
H. Hinderer, stationed on the Thumb Butte District, served as supervisor
on the Guadalupe, Sacramento, and Verde Forest Reserves and National Forests
before becoming supervisor on the Prescott National Forest for about eight
years. Barrett's only negative criticism of Hinderer was that he was too
easily bluffed by the "hard element found around these mining camps and
wood cuttings."
Frank C. W. Pooler, stationed at Crown King, the Reserve's
most difficult district, earned high praise from Barrett. After serving
as supervisor for several Forests, including the Prescott, Pooler became
Regional Forester for the Southwestern Region, 1920-1945. The remaining
staff member, McCloud was an excellent ranger on patrol work and fire duty.He
was able to get along with the "hard element" of his district for he was
unafraid of anything or anybody. Although his education was limited, McCloud
was the best ranger on the Reserve when it came to enforcing regulations.
While the problem of wide-spread timber theft was remedied
fairly quickly, problems of grazing and overgrazing continued for years.
The area's cattle industry began in 1869 when James Baker drove a herd of
300 cattle from New Mexico into the upper end of the Verde River, north
of Jerome. In response to heavy demands for beef by the military he was
soon joined by other "soon-to-be-ranchers" who brought in thousands of head
of cattle. Within 6 years, livestock raising was one of Arizona's leading
industries. Completion of the Southern Pacific Railroad in 1881 and the
Atlantic and Pacific Railroad a year later opened up even more of the territory
for ranching, especially the central and northern areas where rainfall was
more abundant.
Most of Arizona was public domain, but it was 1905 before
the Forest Service adopted an allotment and permit system for livestock.
In the meantime, their numbers were limited only by the availability of
water and vegetation. By 1891, Arizona's tax rolls listed almost 721,000
head of cattle, however, it was commonly believed there were twice that
number actually on the ranges. When the severe drought of the 1890s hit
the Southwest, it dealt a death blow to many ranchers. During the next several
years, thousands of cattle died, ranches went into bankruptcy, and the range
was devastated further by drought and overgrazing.
Even under the Forest Service's system of grazing allotments,
it was difficult to reduce the number of livestock to sustainable levels.
The numbers sometimes reflected politics, the economy, and wartime constraints,
rather than good range management. Livestock permits on the Forest jumped
dramatically during World War I and did not return to their pre-war numbers
until 1926.
In 1927, Frank Grubb, Forest Supervisor, writing for the
Yavapai Magazine, described grazing conditions:
There isn't a man in Arizona today who was here in the seventies
or eighties who can't remember canyons and valleys which today have big,
boulder strewn arroyas, dry except during times of flood, which at that
time either had no water channel at all or if there was one it was a narrow
willow grown stream bed, with no erosion and carrying permanent water. Past
overgrazing is solely responsible for this change.
Over the years, the number of livestock on the Forest has
dropped significantly. From a high in 1920 of 74,378 cattle, herds were
trimmed to a low of 20,392 in 1930. Sheep and goats reached their peak of
128,054 in 1918. These numbers reflect the heavy demand for leather, wool,
and meat products during World War I. The war reversed years of progress
on reducing livestock numbers, but gradually they again declined. In 1993,
there were 14,684 cattle and no sheep permits issued on the Forest.
In earlier years, ranchers used driveways for herding their
livestock - generally sheep and goats - to and from summer and winter ranges.
The Government Gap Driveway on the Forest's southern end and the Oak Creek
Driveway that crossed through the middle of the Baker's Pass area, north
of Jerome, were the most heavily used driveways. In 1911, a half a million
sheep and goats travelled over the Forest's driveways. They were gradually
reduced to 147,241 in 1933 and 5,764 in 1993.
The Prescott National Forest has changed over the century
of its existence. An increased danger of wildfire has been a negative change.
This has come because of increased number of people visiting or living in
the wildland-urban interface and the Forest Service's diligence in suppressing
all wildfires.
Suppression of all wildfires has allowed the forest to become
overgrown with small, closely- growing trees and chaparral. During dry years
these become tinder boxes, waiting for a spark. In the past, occasional
fires burned through the area and cleaned out dead vegetation, densely-packed
chaparral, and smaller trees. This resulted in larger, scattered vegetation,
smaller and cooler fires, and reduced the spread of disease and harmful
insects. As the population grows in the wildland-urban interface, these
dangers will undoubtedly increase.
The Forest Service is now better equipped to handle wildfires
and other disasters, when they do occur. In 1992, the Prescott Fire Center
and Henry Y. H. Kim Aviation facility was dedicated at Prescott's Love Field.
In the 1998 fire season, 2 aerial tankers, a lead plane, and 2 helicopters
will be stationed at the Aviation Facility. During the 1996 fire season,
938,329 gallons of fire retardant was loaded onto aerial tankers and dropped
on fires throughout the Southwest. During the same period, the Prescott
Fire Center shipped $8.3 million worth of equipment and supplies to wildfire
and other disaster incidents across the country.
Today, there are approximately 140 employees on the Forest;
the number climbs about 80 during summer. A wide variety of jobs and skills
are needed today: foresters, biologists, archaeologists, surveyors, office
support, warehouse personnel, geologists, computer specialists, and engineers.