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THE CONSERVATION OF NATURAL
RESOURCES
From Theodore Roosevelt's Seventh
Annual Message to Congress
Dec. 3, 1907
To the Senate and House of Representatives:
. . .The conservation of our natural resources and their proper
use constitute the fundamental problem which underlies almost every
other problem of our national life. . ..As a nation we not only enjoy
a wonderful measure of present prosperity but if this prosperity is
used aright it is an earnest of future success such as no other
nation will have. The reward of foresight for this nation is great
and easily foretold. But there must be the look ahead, there must be
a realization of the fact that to waste, to destroy, our natural
resources, to skin and exhaust the land instead of using it so as to
increase its usefulness, will result in undermining in the days of
our children the very prosperity which we ought by right to hand down
to them amplified and developed. For the last few years, through
several agencies, the government has been endeavoring to get our
people to look ahead and to substitute a planned and orderly
development of our resources in place of a haphazard striving for
immediate profit. Our great river systems should be developed as
national water highways, the Mississippi, with its tributaries,
standing first in importance, and the Columbia second, although there
are many others of importance on the Pacific, the Atlantic, and the
Gulf slopes. The National Government should undertake this work, and
I hope a beginning will be made in the present Congress; and the
greatest of all our rivers, the Mississippi, should receive special
attention. From the Great Lakes to the mouth of the Mississippi there
should be a deep waterway, with deep waterways leading from it to the
East and the West. Such a waterway would practically mean the
extension of our coastline into the very heart of our country. It
would be of incalculable benefit to our people. If begun at once it
can be carried through in time appreciably to relieve the congestion
of our great freight-carrying lines of railroads. The work should be
systematically and continuously carried forward in accordance with
some well-conceived plan. The main streams should be improved to the
highest point of efficiency before the improvement of the branches is
attempted; and the work should be kept free from every taint of
recklessness or jobbery. The inland waterways which lie just back of
the whole Eastern and Southern coasts should likewise be developed.
Moreover, the development of our waterways involves many other
important water problems, all of which should be considered as part
of the same general scheme. The government dams should be used to
produce hundreds of thousands of horse-power as an incident to
improving navigation; for the annual value of the unused
water-powered of the Untied States perhaps exceeds the annual value
of the products of all our mines. As an incident to creating the deep
waterways down the Mississippi, the government should build along its
whole lower length levees which, taken together with the control of
the headwaters, will at once and forever put a complete stop to all
threat of floods in the immensely fertile delta region. The territory
lying adjacent to the Mississippi along its lower course will thereby
become one of the most prosperous and populous, as it already is one
of the most fertile, farming regions in all the world. I have
appointed an inland waterways commission to study and outline a
comprehensive scheme of development along all the lines indicated.
Later I shall lay its report before the Congress.
Irrigation should be far more extensively developed than at
present, not only in the States of the great plains and the Rocky
Mountains, but in many others, as, for instance, in large portions of
the South Atlantic and Gulf States, where it should go hand in hand
with the reclamation of swampland. The Federal Government should
seriously devote itself to this task, realizing that utilization of
waterways and water-power, forestry, irrigation, and the reclamation
of lands threatened with overflow, are all interdependent parts of
the same problem. The work of the Reclamation Service in developing
the larger opportunities of the Western half of our country for
irrigation is more important than almost any other movement. The
constant purpose of the government in connection with the Reclamation
Service has been to use the water resources of the public lands for
the ultimate greatest good of the greatest number; in other words, to
put upon the land permanent home-makers, to use and develop it for
themselves and for their children and children's children. . . .
The effort of the government to deal with the public land has been
based upon the same principle as that of the Reclamation Service. The
land law system which was designed to meet the needs of the fertile
and well-watered regions of the Middle West has largely broken down
when applied to the drier regions of the great plains, the mountains,
and much of the Pacific slope, where a farm of 160 acres is
inadequate for self-support. . . .Three years ago a public-lands
commission was appointed to scrutinize the law, and defects, and
recommend a remedy. Their examination specifically showed the
existence of great fraud upon the public domain, and their
recommendations for changes in the law were made with the design of
conserving the natural resources of every part of the public lands by
putting it to its best use. Especial attention was called to the
prevention of settlement by the passage of great areas of public land
into the hands of a few men, and to the enormous waste caused by
unrestricted grazing upon the open range. The recommendations of the
Public-Lands Commission are sound, for they are especially in the
interest of the actual home-maker; and where the small home-maker
cannot at present utilize the land they provide that the government
shall keep control of it so that it may not be monopolized by a few
men. The Congress has not yet acted upon these recommendations, but
they are so just and proper, so essential to our national welfare,
that I feel confident, if the Congress will take time to consider
them, that they will ultimately be adopted.
Some such legislation as that proposed is essential in order to
preserve the great stretches of public grazing-land which are unfit
for cultivation under present methods and are valuable only for the
forage which they supply. These stretches amount in all to some
300,000,000 acres, and are open to the free grazing of cattle, sheep,
horses, and goats, without restriction. Such a system, or lack of
system, means that the range is not so much used as wasted by abuse.
As the West settles, the range becomes more and more overgrazed. Much
of it cannot be used to advantage unless it is fenced, for fencing is
the only way by which to keep in check the owners of nomad flocks
which roam hither and thither, utterly destroying the pastures and
leaving a waste behind so that their presence is incompatible with
the presence of home-makers. The existing fences are all illegal. . .
. All these fences, those that are hurtful and those that are
beneficial, are alike illegal and must come down. But it is an
outrage that the law should necessitate such action on the part of
the Administration. The unlawful fencing of public lands for private
grazing must be stopped, but the necessity which occasioned it must
be provided for. The Federal Government should have control of the
range, whether by permit or lease, as local necessities may
determine. Such control could secure the great benefit of legitimate
fencing, while at the same time securing and promoting the settlement
of the country. . . . The government should part with its title only
to the actual home-maker, not to the profit-maker who does not care
to make a home. Our prime object is to secure the rights and guard
the interests of the small ranchman, the man who ploughs and pitches
hay for himself. It is this small ranchman, this actual settler and
home-maker, who in the long run is most hurt by permitting thefts of
the public land in whatever form.
Optimism is a good characteristic, but if carried to an excess it
becomes foolishness. We are prone to speak of the resources of this
country as inexhaustible; this is not so. The mineral wealth of the
country, the coal, iron, oil, gas, and the like, does not reproduce
itself, and therefore is certain to be exhausted ultimately; and
wastefulness in dealing with it today means that our descendants will
feel the exhaustion a generation or two before they otherwise would.
But there are certain other forms of waste which could be entirely
stopped-the waste of soil by washing, for instance, which is among
the most dangerous of all wastes now in progress in the United
States, is easily preventible, so that this present enormous loss of
fertility is entirely unnecessary. The preservation or replacement of
the forests is one of the most important means of preventing this
loss. We have made a beginning in forest preservation, but . . . so
rapid has been the rate of exhaustion of timber in the United States
in the past, and so rapidly is the remainder being exhausted, that
the country is unquestionably on the verge of a timber famine which
will be felt in every household in the land. . . . The present annual
consumption of lumber is certainly three times as great as the annual
growth; and if the consumption and growth continue unchanged,
practically all our lumber will be exhausted in another generation,
while long before the limit to complete exhaustion is reached the
growing scarcity will make itself felt in many blighting ways upon
our national welfare. About twenty per cent of our forested territory
is now reserved in national forests, but these do not include the
most valuable timberlands, and in any event the proportion is too
small to expect that the reserves can accomplish more than a
mitigation of the trouble which is ahead for the nation. . . . We
should acquire in the Appalachian and White Mountain regions all the
forest-lands that it is possible to acquire for the use of the
nation. These lands, because they form a national asset, are as
emphatically national as the rivers which they feed, and which flow
through so many States before they reach the ocean. .
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