Annual Report 1999

From the Chairman By Thomas R. Dunlap

he expiration of my term as chairman of the board con- the staff and generous support for an equipment upgrade. Yet, Tcluded nine years of service as member, then vice-chair, it is time once again to address space needs for critical library and then chair and I would like to reflect on more than the last and archive functions. President Anderson is moving forward year. In the early 1990s the solid ground on which the Society’s with to discuss a potential collaborative effort programs had been built was shifting, as were the conditions that could include a new building. under which non-profit foundations such as ours operated. I am glad to have had a hand in some of this work and I During the last decade the History Society has faced would like to thank all the board members who have served these challenges and met them. I believe we are well prepared with me. Your dedication and hard work has been the key ele- for the future. We have a new president, Steve Anderson, ment in the continuing development of the Forest History enhanced programs, and plans for increased cooperation with Society. My particular thanks go out to Lynn W. Day, who several groups. We have held on to the best from the earlier recently passed away. Lynn’s hard work, intelligence, and good era: the building and collections (much enhanced), the hard- humor were for many years a major asset to the board. Many working and enthusiastic staff, and the dedication and com- people will miss her. I would like to thank as well Steve mitment of the members and the board. Anderson and the office staff in Durham, who have carried the Our support for academic forest history, through the jour- daily load. Finally, I offer my best wishes to those who have nal Forest & Conservation History and our publications program, supported the society through dues, donated materials, and had helped over the last twenty years to foster a vigorous new contributions. Ultimately it is the interest and support of the field, environmental history. The Society has had to work out members that formed the society, gave it a voice and a place ways to serve that field without sacrificing its focus on . in the public discussion of forests, and allow it to carry on its We have done so. Joint publication of Environmental History mission of helping us understand the importance of forests in gives us an appropriate place in academic work. Through the our lives and our society. F. K. Weyerhaeuser Fellowship, we are encouraging younger scholars. The Society will sponsor a conference at Duke University that will give environmental historians the chance to become more familiar with the Society and our collections. With Duke University the Society is sponsoring a lecture series—Professor William Cronon gave a very successful inau- gural lecture, and it will soon be printed. Forest History Today presents important findings and ideas in a non-academic form. It should be of interest to anyone interested in our field. The Issue Series, which is successful and which we are seeking to improve, speaks to policy makers and the general public. On its own and in collaboration with Project Learning Tree, the Society is developing ways to integrate forest history into ele- mentary education. Cooperative agreements with the U.S. Forest Service are making the Forest History Society even more important as a source for information on the Forest Service and the history of conservation. Programs depend on facilities as well as ideas and discus- sion, and the Society has over the last decade made consider- able progress. The library and archives are larger and better than they were ten years ago. Our web page and monitoring of environmental sites help FHS reach out beyond the build- ing to make contact with scholars, students, and the general public. This, I should say, has been the result of hard work by

FOREST HISTORY TODAY | FALL 1999 55 Treasurer’s Report ncluded below is the balance sheet as of As can be seen from the balance sheet, we Iour most recently completed year-end had $6,381,000 of marketable securities as June 30, 1999. As has been our policy for of June 30, 1999. Most of these securities many years, the financial statements of the are in the endowment fund and all are Forest History Society, Inc. have been audit- invested through the Frank Russell ed by an independent accountant, Andrew Company. Each year our Board of B. Curl, Certified Public Accountant. We Directors reviews the investment guidelines are pleased to announce that Mr. Curl has and our endowment performance. In issued an unqualified report, stating that the accordance with those guidelines, as of financial statements of the Society are fairly June 30, 1999, approximately 75% of the presented in accordance with generally funds were invested in a variety of equity accepted accounting principles. securities with the remainder in fixed We ended our fiscal year with a net sur- income securities. plus in all funds. Total net assets between During the year our computer systems 1999 and 1998 increased approximately were upgraded to be Year 2000 compliant $525,000. The greatest portion of the and we do not anticipate any issues of con- increase was a result of positive investment cern. A balanced budget has been approved results once again in our endowment fund. for the current year.

FOREST HISTORY SOCIETY, INC. Statement of Financial Position • June 30, 1999 (with comparative totals from 1998)

Assets June 30, 1999 June 30, 1998 CURRENT ASSETS Cash and cash equivalents $ 142,989 $ 45,512 Accounts receivable 24,424 36,090 Pledges receivable 25,000 Inventories 26,420 32,905 Prepaid expense and deposits 6,035 4,195 Current Assets 224,868 118,702 Marketable Securities 6,381,068 5,995,068 Building and equipment 406,579 385,038 $ 7,012,515 $ 6,498,808 Liabilities and Net Assets CURRENT LIABILITIES Accounts payable $ 17,704 $ 25,883 Accrued expense and withholding 1,207 4,219 Current Liabilities 18,911 30,102 Net Assets Unrestricted Undesignated 126,069 120,386 Designated-operations 110,445 88,726 Designated-endowment 4,299,876 3,852,551 Building and equipment 430,950 402,230 Total Unrestricted 4,967,340 4,463,893 Temporarily restricted-operations 67,136 45,685 Permanently restricted-endowment 1,959,128 1,959,128 Total Net Assets 6,993,604 6,468,706 $ 7,012,515 $ 6,498,808

56 FOREST HISTORY TODAY | FALL 1999 Contributions and Project Sponsors This list includes gifts from July 1998 through June 1999.

INDIVIDUALS $100 to $499 Joseph S. Micallef $2500 to $4999 Mr. & Mrs. Steven Anderson B. A. Mullican, Sr. Arthur Andersen $2500 and up W. J. Barton Peter J. Murphy Mason Charitable Trust Richard A. Bennett Mrs. Alfred D. Bell, Jr. Barry Nehr Nicholas School of the Environment Elizabeth Crossman Michael Bentinck-Smith Arthur W. Nelson, Jr. Potlatch Foundation II Mr. & Mrs. Stanley R. Day Edgar B. Brannon, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Ted W. Nelson John Heissenbuttel Richard T. Brewster Ellen Nore Michael McCollum $1500 to $2499 Robert E. Buckman Tom O’Melia Richard Porterfield Anonymous Mrs. Truman W. Collins Elise H. Phares Barbara A. Potter Westvaco Corporation Stephen H. Conger, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Harold T. Pinkett Mr. & Mrs. Walter S. Rosenberry III M. B. “Mac” Connery Charles F. Raper Arthur Temple $1000 to $1499 Arthur W. Cooper Carol Riggs Hubert D. Travaille Anderson-Tully Company Mary J. Coulombe William D. Rowley Robert M. Weyerhaeuser Clark Foundation Alton G. Cronk Malcolm G. Sears Collins Pine Company Vivian W. Day & John W. Stroh III Joachim Siocrona -Pacific Foundation $1500 to $2499 Murlyn B. Dickerman Jeffrey K. Stine William D. Baughman Division of Forest Thomas R. Dunlap Randall Stratton Resources Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Sivertsen Dennis P. Dykstra J. B. Swift, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. W. T. Weyerhaeuser T. J. O’Gara Family Charitable Paul F. Ehinger Don R. Taylor Foundation Susan L. Flader Mr. & Mrs. E. R. Titcomb Pope & Talbot, Inc. $1000 to $1499 Kenneth Funderburke Mr. & Mrs. Stephen T. Titcomb The Reed-Henry Fund of the Seattle Patty Bedient Nancy M. Gordon Hester Turner Foundation Patricia B. Case Perry R. Hagenstein Henry J. Vaux Simpson Fund Maurie Clark Lorne Hammond R. G. Verney 1969 Irrevocable Trust #1 of Sarah- Pat Crawford Ron Hanson Barry Volkers Maud W. Sivertsen Elise R. Donohue Yvan Hardy Samuel C. Wheeler L. L. Stewart Pass-Through Fund of Curley M. Dossman Thomas G. Harris Daniel H. Wick The Oregon Community Rudolph W. Driscoll Jr. Dudley R. Hartel William Wiener, Jr. Foundation F. A. Duttori Edmund Hayes, Jr. Dale L. Wierman Tembec, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. William H. Greer, Jr. Frederick W. Hayes Mark Wilde Timbco Hydraulics Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Steven G. Johnson Gundel & Dennis Hedden Robert B. Wilson Charles E. Klumb Clare W. Hendee Herbert I. Winer $500 to $999 Parnell S. Lewis, Jr. F. B. Hubachek, Jr. Kay Harrigan Woods American Forest Foundation Mrs. Albert J. Moorman Joseph H. Hughes Edgar P. Wyman The Bayport Foundation Peter T. Pope Bob Izlar Canal Industries, Inc. James E. Quinn Eliot H. Jenkins Eastern Washington State Historical William G. Reed, Jr. Philip H. Jones ASSOCIATION, Society Heinrich Rubner Clyde R. Kalahan CORPORATION AND Forest Investment Associates L. L. Stewart Robert H. Kieckhefer FOUNDATION Forintek Canada Corporation Charles A. Weyerhaeuser John W. Langdale, Jr. SUPPORTERS Green Bay Packaging Inc. Mr. and Mrs. George Weyerhaeuser, Sr. Morten J. Lauridsen, Jr. $5000 and up Harrigan Lumber Company, Inc. F. J. Weyerhaeuser Joseph L. Leitzinger American Forest & Paper Association Margaret Rivers Fund Dennis LeMaster Champion International Corporation T & S Hardwoods, Inc. $500 to $999 Mrs. Glen A. Lloyd 1998 Irrevocable Trust of Tenneco Packaging Charles W. Bingham George V. Lonngren Lynn W. Day Thermo Fibertek Inc. Luther E. Birdzell Douglas W. MacCleery Georgia-Pacific Corporation Weldwood of Canada Limited Gene C. Brewer John M. McClelland, Jr. Laird, Norton Endowment Foundation Weyerhaeuser Company Dwight Harrigan J. Greeley McGowin T. L. L. Temple Foundation Willamette Industries, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Norman E. Johnson Norman F. McGowin, Jr. Temple-Inland Forest Products Harry E. Murphy John R. McGuire Corporation Mr. & Mrs. Harold K. Steen John P. McMahon $250 to $499 USDA Forest Service Alberta Forest Products Association Mr. & Mrs. F. T. Weyerhaeuser Ed Leigh McMillan II Carl A. Weyerhaeuser 1969 Trust C George H. Weyerhaeuser, Jr. & J. T. McShan Associated Oregon Loggers, Inc. Weyerhaeuser Company Foundation W. M. Beaty & Associates, Inc. Kathleen McGoldrick Nick Menzies Weyerhaeuser-Day Foundation Gerald W. Williams Buchanan Hardwoods, Inc.

57 FOREST HISTORY TODAY | FALL 1999 57 DONOR LIST continued from page 61

California Association $100 to $249 California Redwood Association W. M. Cramer Lumber Company THE FOREST HISTORY SOCIETY Canfor Corporation Hamilton Roddis Foundation, Inc. Chesapeake Forest Products Company Montana Logging Association is a nonprofit educational institution. Founded in 1946, it is dedicated Coastal Lumber Company National Hardwood Lumber to advancing historical understanding of human interactions with Coe Manufacturing Company Association forested environments. The Society is a membership organization; Columbia Forest Products, Inc. Professional Forestry Services, Inc. dues range upward from $40 annually. Southern Forest Products Association Corbett Timber Company Officers Forestry Suppliers, Inc. Tumac Lumber Company, Inc. William D. Baughman, chairman Gilman Paper Company Norman Johnson, co-vice-chairman Giustina Land & Timber Company Frederick J. Weyerhaeuser, co-vice-chairman Glatfelter Pulp Wood Company INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERS Steven Anderson, president/secretary Hardwood Market Report Patricia M. Bedient, treasurer Company American Pulpwood Association Larson & McGowin, Inc. Appalachian Society of American Board of Directors Mater Engineering Ltd. Foresters *member, executive committee Mead Publishing Paper Division Association of Consulting Foresters T. Michael Apsey, retired, Victoria, BC Murray Pacific Corporation Auburn University School of Forestry William D. Baughman, Westvaco Corporation, Summerville, SC* NCASI Brogden Company Patricia M. Bedient, Arthur Andersen, Seattle, WA Nicholson Manufacturing Company Colorado State Forest Service Edgar B. Brannon, Jr., Grey Towers National Landmark, Milford, PA Owens Forest Products Connecticut Forest & Park Association Marvin D. Brown, Willamette Industries, Portland, OR Random Lengths Publications Danish Hunting & Forestry Museum Charles H. Geale, Tree Canada Foundation, Ottawa, ON* Wesley Rickard, Inc. Division of Forestry Sharon G. Haines, International Paper, Bainbridge, GA Seaman Timber Company Longview Fibre Company, Timber Lorne Hammond, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC The Setzer Foundation Department Yvan Hardy, Canadian Forest Service, Ottawa, ON Seven Islands Land Company Minnesota Department of Natural Norman E. Johnson, Weyerhaeuser Company, Tacoma, WA* Shaw, McLeod, Belser & Hurlbutt Resources, Division of Forestry Nancy Langston, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI Shearer Lumber Products Morrison County Historical Society Catherine M. Mater, Mater Engineering, Ltd., Corvallis, OR Sizemore & Sizemore, Inc. Norsk Skogbruksmuseum Nora J. Mitchell, National Park Service, Woodstock, VT Smurfit-Stone Container Corporation North Carolina Division of Forestry Peter J. Murphy, retired, St. Albert, AB Snavely Forest Products, Inc. State University, Richard L. Porterfield, Champion International, Stamford, CT Starker Forests, Inc. Department of Forestry John F. Richards, Duke University, Durham, NC Stora Enso Port Hawkesbury Ltd. Oklahoma State University, Forest Carol Riggs, Forestry Museum, Lufkin, TX U.S. Epperson Underwriting Company Resources Center Walter S. Rosenberry, retired, Denver, CO Wilson Lumber Company, Inc. T. L. L. Temple Memorial Archives William C. Siegel, Consultant/Attorney, River Ridge, LA Woolley Enterprises, Inc. Theodore M. Smith, Kendall Foundation, Boston, MA Frederick J. Weyerhaeuser, ConserVentures, Beverly, MA* George H. Weyerhaeuser, Weyerhaeuser Company, Tacoma, WA

Emeritus Members of the Board John M. McClelland, Jr., Seattle, WA Charles S. Peterson, St. George, UT Harold T. Pinkett, Washington, DC Herbert I. Winer, New Haven, CT

Staff Steven Anderson, president Andrea H. Anderson, administrative assistant Katherine M. Cox, assistant director for administration Michele A. Justice, assistant archivist/librarian Karie L. Kirkpatrick, managing editor Carol A. Marochak, editorial assistant Cheryl P. Oakes, librarian Carol C. Severance, historian Arleen M. Fields, cataloger Lorraine S. Swain, library volunteer Jennifer Treutelaar, library associate

F. K. Weyerhaeuser Forest History Fellow Jason S. McLachlan (1999 winner)

58 FOREST HISTORY TODAY | FALL 1999 Gifts to the Forest History Society Library July 1, 1998 to June 30, 1999

Gerald Williams: Geier, Max G. Forest Science Research and “Southern Forest Heritage Museum & Research Center,” Scientific Communities in Alaska: A History of the Origins and Longleaf, . Evolution of USDA Forest Service Research in Juneau, Fairbanks, J. Ellis Crosby, Jr.: “Suwanee River Pine and Cypress.” Reprint and Anchorage. Portland, Or.: USDA Forest Service, 1998. of 1929 article that appeared in American Lumberman (June Williams, Gerald W. “Bibliography of Civilian Conservation 1: 51–90). Corps: Books and Articles.” 1999. 18 p. James Kates: Kates, James. “James Oliver Curwood: John Suddath: 2 photographs of Konnarock, , a mill Antimodernist in the Conservation Crusade.” Michigan town built by the Hassinger Lumber Co. Suddath’s grand- Historical Review 24:1 (Spring 1998): 73–102. mother operated a boarding house in the town and his Jacques Arbouin: Information on various forest-related top- grandfather was a sawyer. ics in France and California. Carroll B. Butler: Butler, Carroll B. Treasures of the Longleaf Peter Holloran: Holloran, Pete. “Seeing the Trees Through Pines: Naval Stores. Tarkel Publishing, 1998. the Forest: Oaks and History in the Presidio.” In Reclaiming Mikael Grut: Grut, Mikael. Forestry and Forest Industry in South San Francisco: History, Recent Politics, Culture, edited by James Africa. Cape Town: A.A. Balkema, 1965. Brook, Chris Carlsson, and Nancy J. Peters. San Francisco, Lloyd Irland: Irland, Lloyd C. Maine Forest Area, 1600–1995: Calif.: City Lights, 1998. 333–52 pp. Review of Available Estimates. Orono: University of Maine. David Scott: “A Plan to Save the Forests. Forest Preservation College of Natural Sciences, Forestry, and Agriculture, 1998. by Military Control.” Century Magazine 49 (1895): 626–635. Irland, Lloyd C. “Maine Lumber Production, 1839–1997: A Alan MacEachern: MacEachern, Alan. “Where He Didn’t Statistical Overview.” Maine History 38 (Summer 1998): 36–49. Spend His Summer Vacation: Martin Luther King, Racism Barry Nehr: 12 8 1/2”x 11” pen and ink drawings of wildlife; and Fundy National Park.” In Changing Parks: The History, 11 11”x14” pen & ink drawings of wildlife; 2 signed copies Future, and Cultural Context of Parks and Heritage Landscapes, of “Southern National Forests” poster—all drawn by Barry edited by John S. Marsh and Bruce W. Hodgins. Toronto, Ont.: Nehr. Natural Heritage/Natural History, 1998. 135–139 pp. John Dargavel: Harris, Richard. ‘To Market! To Market!’: The Kenneth G. Day: Olson, Steven D. “The Historical Occurrence Changing Role of the Australian Timber Merchant, 1945–1965. of Fire in the Central Hardwoods, with Emphasis on Urban Research Program Working Paper No. 62. Canberra: Southcentral Indiana.” Natural Areas Journal 16:3 (1996): Australian National University, 1998. [80] p. 248–56. Arthur W. Cooper: 7 cartons of records from the Committee Laurence C. Walker: Walker, Laurence C. Axes, Oxen, and of Scientists, 1977–79. Cooper was chair of the Committee. Men: A Pictorial History of the Southern Pine Lumber Company. Includes minutes, reading files, and drafts of the final report. Diboll, Texas: The Author, 1975. 73 p. Illustrations. Doug Hawes-Davis: 3 VHS videotapes of films he has recent- Douglas Alvord: Tall Timber: the Carolina Forester’s Story. Text ly produced on the paper industry including: “Green Rolling & Illustrations by Douglas Alvord. s.l.: The Author Hills: Documenting Industrial Pulp and Paper Development and Weyerhaeuser Co., c1998. [35] p. Children’s book. in Central Appalachia.” Produced by Doug Hawes-Davis, Jim Coufal: Deed, Richard N. History of Ozark Section, Society Missoula, Mt.: Ecology Center Productions, 1995. of American Foresters, 1929–1982. Rebecca Wix: Generations of Pride: A Centennial History of Fred Landenberger: Landenberger, C. Fred. Gains and Losses: International Paper. New York: International Paper, c1998. California Forest Protective Association 1909–1988. Harry Murphy: 1 VHS videotape of the Retired Loggers Club Edgar Brannon: Pinchot, Gifford. Breaking New Ground. Meeting 7-16-98—“50 Years of Consulting Forestry.” Commemorative ed. Washington: Island Press, c1998. Elise Donahue: Koch, Elers. Forty Years a Forester: 1903–1943. Terry Collins: Collins, Terry. Collins Almanor Forest: A Human Missoula, Mt.: Mountain Press, 1998. xii, 206 p. Illustrations, History. [Chester, Calif.: Collins Pine Co., 1998]. Collins, index, bibliography. Terry. Collins Pennsylvania Forest: A Human History, [Chester, Will Sarvis: Sarvis, Will. The Salt Trade of Nineteenth Century Calif. : The Author, c1999] 14 p. Saltville, Virginia. [s.l.]: The Author, 1998. 85 p. Illustrations, Charles D. Smith: Smith, Charles D. “From Damascus to bibliography. Harvard (and Maine or Georgia!).” Appalachian Trailway Diane Taliaferro: Taliaferro, Diane. Manuscript of “Women News May/June 1988:11–12. of the Forest Service.” Kenney P. Funderburke, Jr.: a videotape, manuscripts, and M.B. Connery: 25 8" x 10" b&w photographs of locomotives articles on lumbering in Brazil, logging railroads in South from various companies and locations in the South. Carolina, and the history of the West Virginia Pulp & Paper Photographic assistance as needed by FHS. Brochure— Company (Westvaco).

59 FOREST HISTORY TODAY | FALL 1999 59 Zebulon White: newspaper article on museum at Long Leaf, Daniel J. Philippon: Philippon, Daniel J. “Poe in the Ragged Louisiana and a copy of The South’s Third Forest: How it can Mountains: Environmental History and Romantic meet future demands. Southern Forest Resource Analysis Aesthetics.” Southern Literary Journal 30 (Spring 1998): 1–16. Committee 1969. Branch, Michael, and Daniel Philippon. “A Place in the Catherine Mater: The Business of Sustainable Forestry: Case South.” Appalachian Heritage 26 (Winter 1998): 18–25. Studies. Chicago: John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Jonathan K. Gerland: Gerland, Jonathan K. “The Yellow Bluff Foundation, c1998. Tramway of Jasper County, Texas, 1877–1881.” Texas Gulf Charles Harden: 2 VHS videotapes of sessions from the Historical & Biographical Record 34 (November 1998): 67–74. Association of Consulting Foresters Annual Meeting 1998. Two oral history interviews with Arthur Temple, Jr. conducted Steven M. Bratkovich: Bratkovich, Steven. “A Forester’s Role by Megan Lambert in 1985. Temple, Arthur, Jr. “Mr. Arthur in the Development of a Rural Sociology Discipline” a paper Temple Speaking to the Diboll Historical Society,” 1988. he wrote in 1985. Mart Stewart: Stewart, Mart. “Environmental History: Profile Barry Volkers: Mayo, Joan. Paldi Remembered: 50 Years in the of a Developing Field.” History Teacher 30 (May 1998): 351–368. Life of a Vancouver Island Logging Town. Duncan, B.C. : The Stewart, Mart A. “‘Let Us Begin with the Weather’: Climate, Author, c1997. 130 p. Race, and Cultural Distinctiveness in the American South.” In Beth Paulsen: Bennett, Richard. Tradition Meeting the Future Nature & Society in Historical Context, edited by Mikulas Teich, in Idaho’s Forest Industry: Bennett Lumber Products Inc., Yesterday, Roy Porter, and Bo Gustafsson. New York: Cambridge Today and Tomorrow. Moscow, Id.: University of Idaho. University Press, 1997, p. 240–256. College of Forestry, Wildlife and Range Sciences. Dept. of Lawrence R. Pettinger: 49 volumes dealing with a wide vari- Forest Products, 1988. 16 p. ety of topics in forestry, silviculture, and natural resources Jeffrey Stine: Stine, Jeffrey K. and Joel A. Tarr. “At the management. Intersection of Histories: Technology and the Environment.” Edmund Hayes, Jr.: Hayes, Philip S. Boxing the Compass: The Technology and Culture Vol. 39, No. 4 (October 1998):601–640. Life and Times of Edmund Hayes. Salem, Ore.: Lynx Steen, Harold K.: Treat, Payson Jackson. The National Land Communications, c1998. System. New York : Russell & Russell, 1967 reprint of 1910 Mark Naudé: Naudé, M. “Brief notes regarding the Uniforms original. Snyder, K. Alan. Register of the Arthur Maass Papers. and Badges worn by the South African Department of 3 oral history interviews from the “Water Resources, People, Forestry (Suid-Afrikaanse Deparment van Bosbou).” Arbor and Issues” series from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Magazine (March 1995). including Arthur Maass, William R. Gianelli, and Gilbert F. Mary Bell: Bell, Mary T. Cutting Across Time: Logging, Rafting White. 3 VHS videotapes: “Paul Bunyan,” “The Big Trees,” and Milling the Forests of Lake Superior. Schroeder, Minn.: “Starker Forests: The Legacy of T.J. Starker.” 14 8x10 b&w Schroeder Area Historical Society, c1999. movie stills and 1 negative from movies about logging or Susan Deaver Olberding: Olberding, Susan Deaver. lumbering. 3 pcs. sheet music dealing with trees, sawdust, “Prospecting for Turpentine in Northern Arizona.” The Ol’ Camp Curry. Minkler, Lon and Don Graham. “The Tall and Pioneer Vol. 9. No. 3 (Sept–Dec 1998):12–13. Uncut: Logging Poems and Cartoons.” L.P. records of Joachim Siocrona: 15 books on the forest history of Sweden “A dventures of Peter Pine.” (in Swedish). R.J. Bernard, Jr.: Timber Tax Journal Vols. 11, 13, 16–19. Donald R. Theoe: The World’s Work, January 1908. Has arti- Dennis LeMaster: 5 boxes of records and printed materials cle “The Statesmanship of Forestry” by Arthur W. Page. recording his participation in the hearings before the House Bob Izlar: Drushka, Ken. “A Forerunner of Cut-to-Length Agriculture Committee in the 1970s on the Forest and Harvesting: Walter Jarck.” Timberjack News 2 (1998):24–25. Rangeland Renewable Resources Planning Act. Research George Tsoumis: Tsoumis, George. “Forestry in Greece.” Yale materials accumulated for his book Decade of Change: The Forest School News, Vol. 52, No. 3 (July 1964):35–37. Remaking of Forest Service Statutory Authority During the 1970s. Lorne Hammond: Foster, Janet. Working for Wildlife: the Denver James: Fedkiw, John. Managing Multiple Uses on National Beginning of Preservation in Canada. Toronto: University of Forest, 1905–1995: A 90-year Learning Experience and It Isn’t Toronto Press, c1998. Sterling, Keir et al., eds. Biographical Finished Yet. [Washington]: USDA Forest Service, 1998. Dictionary of American and Canadian Naturalists and Jim Deaton: Deaton, Jim. Crosscut Saw Reflections in the Pacific Evnironmentalists. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, c1997. Northwest. Fairfield, Wa. : Ye Galleon Press, c1998. Peter Murphy: Living Legacy: Sustainable Forest Management at Keith Ticknor: 24 - 5x7" black & white photographs: portable Hinton, Alberta. Published by Weldwood, Canada. (48) p. sawmills, plowing firebreaks, using crosscut saws, log skid- Andreas Jordahl Rhude: Manuals and publications from sev- ding, railroad ties, etc. eral forest products companies, reprint of “Wood in Creative Heinrich Rubner: several books and articles by Rubner and Architecture” from The Lumberman Nov. 1959, NLMA cata- his father, Konrad Rubner, regarding forests and forestry in log on wood in church construction. Germany (in German and French). Approximately 200 pho- Peter Coates: Coates, Peter. In Nature’s Defence: Conservation tographs and postcards collected by Heinrich Rubner and his and Americans. BAAS Pamphlets in American Studies 26. father, pertaining to forests and forestry in Germany. Some of Keele, Staffordshire: British Association for American Studies, the material is from the Weimar period and was gathered by 1993. 53 p. Heinrich Rubner in the research for his book Deutsche Nigel M. Asquith: Asquith, Nigel M., John Terborgh, A. Forstgeschichte 1933–1945. Elizabeth Arnold, and C. Mailen Riveros. “The Fruits the

60 FOREST HISTORY TODAY | FALL 1999 Agouti Ate: Hymenaea courbaril Seed Fate When Its Disperser is Absent.” Journal of Tropical Ecology 15 (1999): 229–35. The Newest Resource in Forest and Ann Stringfield: excerpt from “A Heritage Conservation History of Healing: the Medical History of Haywood County” Waynesville, N.C.: Forest and Wildlife Science in America: A History Waynesville Historical Society, 1994. Describes the medical facilities and doctors who worked for logging com- Announcing Forest and panies in western North Carolina in Wildlife Science in America: the early 20th century, primarily Champion Fibre and its subsidiaries. A History—A must-have Terence E. Hanley: Historical Views of resource for land Indiana Forests: A Tribute to Roy C. Brundage. West Lafayette, Ind.: Dept. managers, researchers, of Forestry and Natural Resources, and students that traces Purdue University, n.d. the history of science in forestry and wildlife management. Published SEARCH FOR EDITOR OF by the Forest History ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY Society, this resource The American Society for shows the role science Environmental History and the Forest has played in the History Society are seeking a new editor for their joint journal, ENVI- formation of natural RONMENTAL HISTORY. The current resource policy during editor, Hal Rothman, will be stepping down at the end of 2001, and his the last 100 years. successor will be expected to begin taking on editorial responsibilities Sixteen chapters cover both organi- during the summer of 2001 and zational programs and disciplinary control of operations by the end fields including: of the year. Duties will include all activities associated with the editorial Forest and Wildlife Science in PROGRAMS: content of the journal—soliciting and America: A History Industrial Research commissioning articles as appropri- Harold K. Steen, editor University Research ate, screening submissions, and 455 pages, 39 illustrations, U.S. Forest Service determining the contents of each Fish and Wildlife Service issue. The editor will work with the published May 1999 production staff, located at the Forest Soil Conservation Service National Park Service History Society offices in Durham, $14.95 plus $4 shipping and handling NC, with the associate editors, and DISCIPLINARY FIELDS: with the book review editor in the Mail order and payment to Forest Ecology and Silviculture production process. Candidates Forest History Society, should have a wide knowledge of 701 Vickers Avenue, Genetic Manipulation and interest in the areas the journal Durham, NC 27701-3162. Forest Economics covers and experience with academic Phone order with credit card Statistical Methods editing. For inquiries and application information to (919) 682-9319. Technology of Wood and Fiber instructions contact the head of Forest Soils the Search Committee, Professor Social Science Thomas Dunlap, Department of History, Texas A & M University, Range Science College Station, TX 77843-4236 Naval Stores (phone 409-845-7107; e-mail Wildlife Science [email protected]).

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