| Abstract: | As Pennsylvania's first state forester and Chief Forest Fire Warden, George H. Wirt (1880- 1961) came to be known as one of America's most influential forest protectionists. |
| The collection includes documents pertaining to the founding and early history of the American Forestry Association (AFA). Materials include correspondence, copies of speeches, essays, and addresses delivered before various organizations, minutes of the annual meetings of the American Forestry Congress (1882-1887), and copies of the Proceedings of the American Forestry Association (1882-1897), as well as other general information relating to the development of the AFA. Much of the collection pertains to Dr. John A. Warder, president of AFA for a number of years in the late nineteenth century. Also included are receipts for dues of George H. Wirt for the years 1901-1912, 1917, 1919, and 1936-1944. Also a typed list of AFA presidents (1875-1966), a typed list of AFA annual meetings (1920-1966), a typed list of AFA Special Meetings (1875-1950), and a handwritten list of AFA Proceedings for the years 1882-1897. | |
| Title: | George H. Wirt Collection, 1873 - 1966 |
| Creator: | Wirt, George H. (George Hermann), 1880-1961, collector |
| Repository: | Forest History Society Library and Archives |
| Call Number: | 3964 |
| Language of Material: | Material in English |
| Extent: | 0.5 linear feet (1 archival box) |
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George H. Wirt is one of the foremost names in Pennsylvania forest history. As the state's first state forester and Chief Forest Fire Warden, Wirt came to be known as one of America's most influential forest protectionists. Born on November 28, 1880 in McVeytown, Pennsylvania, he received a B.E. degree from Juniata College in 1891 with aspirations of becoming an engineer. But a close friend of Wirt's father, Dr. Joseph T. Rothrock, a prominent botanist and forest enthusiast, had other plans in mind for him. Under advice from Rothrock, Wirt enrolled at the Biltmore Forest School and received his Bachelor of Forestry degree in 1901.
By this time Dr. Rothrock had been appointed the first Pennsylvania forestry commissioner. Wirt accepted the job of state forester, at which position he authored the first technical bulletin on forestry issued in Pennsylvania. In 1903, Wirt and Rothrock organized the opening of the Forest Academy at Mont Alto, Pennsylvania, of which Wirt was named the first director. Under Wirt's guidance, the academy operated as a higher ranger school and advanced to provide college-level courses of professional caliber only to the most deserving students. The Forest Academy later merged with the Department of Forestry of Pennsylvania State College.
Wirt married in 1907 and left the academy in 1910 to accept the job of forest inspector for the Department of Forestry at Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. During this time he supervised the newly-educated staff of foresters at work in portions of the State Forests. In 1913 the proposition of forest protection in the state was recognized as fundamental, and Wirt was assigned the job of drafting a forest protection law. It was presented to the legislature in 1915, and in the fall of that same year Wirt was made Chief Forest Fire Warden of Pennsylvania, a position he held until his retirement in 1946.
Wirt was known as the primary architect of the unified forest fire control structure for Pennsylvania, which became a model for many other state protection organizations. He solicited the appointment of 4,400 fire wardens and 30,000 crew members. Forest fire loss dropped from an average of half a million acres per year to about 25,000 acres a year in the period of Wirt's leadership. He was honored in 1928 with a monument erected in his name at Mont Alto and was awarded an honorary Master of Science degree from Juniata College. He was a fellow in the Society of American Foresters, served on a number of committee assignments, wrote many articles, and delivered many public lectures. He remained active in state and local conservation movements after his retirement. George H. Wirt died on November 8, 1961 in Camp Hill, Pennsylvania.
Note: The above biographical information about George H. Wirt was drawn from the following sources: (1) George H. Wirt, "Autobiography of and by George H. Wirt, Graduating from Biltmore Forest School in 1901," in The Biltmore Immortals, Biographies of 50 American Boys Graduating From the Biltmore Forest School Which Was the First School of American Forestry on American Soil, Volume I ([Darmstadt, Germany: L. C. Wittich, 1953]), pp. 310-314; and (2) "George R. [sic] Wirt (1880-1961),"Journal of Forestry 60 (January 1962): 60-61. [Obituary.]
Established in 1875, the American Forestry Association is the oldest group in North America organized to promote forest conservation. The organization became American Forests in 1992.
The collection includes documents pertaining to the founding and early history of the American Forestry Association (AFA). Materials include correspondence, copies of speeches, essays, and addresses delivered before various organizations, minutes of the annual meetings of the American Forestry Congress (1882-1887), and copies of the Proceedings of the American Forestry Association (1882-1897), as well as other general information relating to the development of the AFA. Much of the collection pertains to Dr. John A. Warder, president of AFA for a number of years in the late nineteenth century. Also included are receipts for dues of George H. Wirt for the years 1901-1912, 1917, 1919, and 1936-1944. Also a typed list of AFA presidents (1875-1966), a typed list of AFA annual meetings (1920-1966), a typed list of AFA Special Meetings (1875-1950), and a handwritten list of AFA Proceedings for the years 1882-1897.
1. American Forestry Association Materials, 1873-1966
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[Identification of item], George H. Wirt Collection, Library and Archives, Forest History Society, Durham, NC, USA.
Processed by Staff
Encoded by Amanda Ross, June 2009 and Eben Lehman, January 2010
Funding from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission supported the encoding of this finding aid. Support for digitization and outreach provided by the Alvin J. Huss Endowment.