Chiefs
Though the U.S. Forest Service was established in 1905, in 1876 the Department of Agriculture hired Franklin Hough to investigate and report on forest conditions in the United States. In 1881, Congress created the U.S. Division of Forestry. Twenty years later, it became the Bureau of Forestry, and four years after that, following the transfer of the federal forest reserves from the Department of the Interior to Agriculture, it was reconstituted as the U.S. Forest Service. The head administrator was called “Chief” until 1898, when Gifford Pinchot changed the title to “Forester.” In 1935, it was changed back to "Chief."
Franklin B. Hough
1881 - 1883
Nathaniel H. Egleston
1883 - 1886
Bernhard E. Fernow
1886 - 1898
Gifford Pinchot
1898 - 1910
Henry S. Graves
1910 - 1920
William B. Greeley
1920 - 1928
Robert Y. Stuart
1928 - 1933
Ferdinand A. Silcox
1933 - 1939
Earle H. Clapp (Acting)
1939 - 1943
Lyle F. Watts
1943 - 1952
Richard E. McArdle
1952 - 1962
Edward P. Cliff
1962 - 1972
John R. McGuire
1972 - 1979
R. Max Peterson
1979 - 1987
F. Dale Robertson
1987 - 1993
Jack Ward Thomas
1993 - 1996
Mike Dombeck
1996 - 2001
Dale N. Bosworth
2001 - 2007
Abigail Kimbell
2007 - 2009
Thomas Tidwell
2009 - 2017
Tony Tooke
2017 - 2018
Vicki Christiansen
2018 - 2021
Randy Moore
2021 - Present