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A View From The Overlook: The First National Park (We Think)

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After doing a bit of volunteer time last summer at Yellowstone National Park, I decided to do a column on dear old Yellowstone, established way back in 1872, “The World’s First National Park."

Or so I thought.

In the hope of garnering some esoteric facts on the establishment of Yellowstone National Park not listed in the park brochure, I Googled up “World’s First National Park” in the World Wide Web (That handy gizmo that Al Gore is said to have invented).

Imagine my surprise when the World Wide Web suggested that there was some controversy concerning the NPS gospel that Yellowstone really was the world’s first national park.

I was shocked, shocked!

However, if in doubt, ask a ranger.

So I asked Al Nash, public affairs officer for Yellowstone, if there was some question concerning Yellowstone being first.

Now Al is a conscientious ranger; if he doesn’t know, he will not try to snow you, he will try to find out. He wasn’t absolutely sure, so he asked the Washington Office of the National Park Service. WASO preferred not to comment. (In retrospect, this might be a bit like asking the Vatican if Jesus really IS the Messiah; you are not likely to get a response to a self-evident question). However, the lack of response WAS a bit mysterious.

On the other hand, WASO may simply have wanted to avoid endless, useless arguments (such as to who really discovered America or invented the electric light bulb).

Now it is true that the idea of a “National Park” or “Nation’s Park” did not originate with Yellowstone. There were a number of thoughtful men and women down through the ages who thought that certain large tracts of land of great beauty should be preserved, not just as a Gentleman’s estate, but open to the public, both high and low.

According to the BBC History Magazine: “National parks have been described, with some justification, as 'The best idea that America ever had,'" but actually, the person who first came up with that farsighted and world-shaping idea was an Englishman.

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It was the celebrated Lake District romantic poet William Wordsworth (1770-1850) who was the first to put the national park idea into words. In the concluding paragraph of his Guide Through the District of the Lakes in the North of England, first published in 1810, he expressed the hope that landowners would join him in his wish to “(P)reserve the native beauty of this delightful district.” And then he came up with the suggestion that his beloved Lake District might some day be “(A) sort of national property in which every man has a right and an interest who has an eye to perceive and a heart to enjoy.”

With the imminent arrival of the railroad, he was later to qualify that far-sighted and all-inclusive vision with the fear that the landscape would be destroyed if “(A)rtisans, laborers, and the humbler class of shopkeepers” were to invade his precious fells (mountains).

(Note: This is exactly the same fear expressed by the Sierra Club, Edward Abbey, Barbara Moritsch, and others that Yosemite and other “preserved” areas would be overrun by industrial mass tourism. Naturally, park concessions would beg to differ.)

Now did Parliament and/or the local landowners leap at Wordsworth’s suggestion? Well, no. At least not until the passage by Parliament of the landmark National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act in 1949. The Lake District would become England’s second national park in 1951, around 141 years after Wordsworth made his polite suggestion.

Along Came Catlin

The next idea for some kind of national park came from an American, the painter George Catlin (1798-1872).

Mr. Catlin fell in love with the High Plains of the American West and the wild, free life of the native peoples therein. He foresaw that that way of life was doomed unless we Americans took the highly unlikely step of turning away from “Manifest Destiny” and made a conscious effort at protecting not only an entire ecosystem (that concept was yet to be invented), but also the unchanged cultures of Plains Indians.

In his 1841 book Letters and Notes on the Manners, Customs, and Conditions of the North American Indians, Catlin noted that the High Plains” from Lake Winnipeg to Mexico is “almost one plain of grass which is, and ever must be useless to cultivating man.”

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An 1849 painting of Catlin by William Fiske.

Catlin’s use for this ecological White Elephant was most elegant: “What a beautiful and thrilling specimen for America to preserve and hold up to the view of her refined citizens and the world in future ages, a Nation’s Park, containing man and beast in all the wild and freshness of the natural beauty…. A magnificent park where the world could see for ages to come, the Native in his classic attire, galloping his wild horse, with sinewy bow and shield and lance, among the fleeing herds of elk and bison.”

Now there would be a National Park! A sea of grass and limitless big sky stretching from the Canadian to the Mexican border! Millions of acres of untrammeled freedom and true wilderness! No postage stamp samples of NPS-sanitized wildness, but rather the real thing!

Was such a park possible? Don’t see why not, neighbors. In the 1980s, a couple of Ivy League professors, Frank and Deborah Popper, agreed with Catlin and John Wesley Powell that the High Plains were essentially useless for agriculture and proposed something called “the Buffalo Commons," very much like Catlin’s suggestion. The reason the Poppers proposed “the Buffalo Commons” is that people literally heading for greener pastures are depopulating much of the High Plains.

Catlin’s proposed park generously included the Native Americans in all their untamed glory. This might pose a problem as there was no such thing as a pacifist Plains Indian tribe and some of them were quite dangerous (though mainly to other Indians). Still, there would be Senator Ted Cruz constantly complaining to the Secretary of the Interior about Comanche’s absentmindedly scalping Ted’s Texas constituents.

Now, the fascinating thing about both the Wordsworth and the Catlin proposals is that they would have allowed the original two-legged inhabitants to remain on board the “National Park”; English farmers in Wordworth’s case and Native Americans in Catlin’s version. In the “America’s Best Idea” version of the National Park Idea, the human occupants were “removed” by genteel genocide, in the case of the Indians at Great Smoky, or condemnation of homesteaders, as in the creation of Shenandoah, before the parks were established.

Interestingly enough, in modern, non-US parks, the Wordsworth/Catlin park concept of including the original inhabitants seems to be prevailing, as evidenced by Australia’s Kakadu National Park and a number of South American parks.

Ah! But we’re begging the question here! Wordworth’s and Catlin’s suggestions were only ideas in books, no matter how lofty the thought. What, if not Yellowstone, was the World’s First National Park to be actually established?

According to some, that first park actually would be the 10,000-acre Main Ridge Forest Reserve established in 1776 by Act of Parliament on the British Caribbean Island of Tobago and still going strong today.

The UNESCO justification of Outstanding Universal Value states that:

“The Tobago Main Ridge Forest Reserve is on record as the oldest legally protected forest reserve geared specifically toward a conservation purpose. It was established April 13, 1776 by an ordinance that the Reserve is for the 'purpose of attracting frequent showers of rain upon which the fertility of lands in these climates doth entirely depend.'”

This was not an eccentric whim on the part of the British Parliament, but the end result of pioneering environmental research on the part of Stephen Hales who established a correlation between tree cover and rainfall. Hales was able to attract the attention of Soame Jenyns, a member of Parliament responsible for overseas plantations who waged an 11-year successful battle to preserve the rain forest.

According to Scientific American, “The preservation of Tobago’s forest was the first act in the history and preservation of the environment.”

Yes, but was the Main Ridge Forest Reserve the world’s first national park?

Close, but no cigar: The Reserve was strictly utilitarian, designed to capture water for the sugar plantations on the plain below the mountain. The slaves who manned these plantations were hardly asked, “(T)o climb the mountains and get their good tidings” on their day off.

So is Yellowstone home free as the first park?

Not quite.

The Nature Conservancy, that powerful and influential environmental NGO, has a word on the subject. According to an article, The World’s Oldest National Park: Ghosts of Monks and Red Deer, in the Conservancy’s blog CONSERVANCY TALK; SHARING NATURE’S VOICES, November 10, 2009, the oldest park is actually something called Bogd Khan Mountain and is located in, of all places, Mongolia, that Alaska-sized country sandwiched uncomfortably between Russia and China. Mongolia has a population of less than 3 million, but they do have national parks.

Charles Bedford, author of the Conservancy article, dates Bogd Khan Mountain National Park’s establishment from 1778, nearly a hundred years before Yellowstone! Additionally, according to Mr. Bedford, Bodg Khan Mountain was not just an idea, but also an operational protected area with 23 rangers on the payroll by 1783.

Mr. Bedford rests his case on two documents in the Mongolian Central Archives, both dating from 1778 (as derived from Chinese methods of dating). The first document is a letter from the enterprising governor of Mongolia to the Chinese Imperial Court at Beijing, describing the situation at Bogd Khan Mountain and offering some suggestions.

The second document is a letter of reply essentially agreeing with the Governor of Mongolia.

Now who is Charles Bedford? Definitely one of the tall dogs of the environmental NGO’s, neighbors! He is Regional Managing Director of the Nature Conservancy’s Asia-Pacific Region. Based in Beijing, Mr. Bedford has been in and out of Mongolia for the last five years administering the Conservancy’s Mongolia Program.

Obviously, his claims are not easily dismissed.

One can also understand the silence on the part of WASO. The Washington Office may have reasoned that there was nothing to be gained in crossing swords with an entity as wealthy and powerful as the Nature Conservancy over a matter of historical precedence.

So is the Nature Conservancy correct in its claim that Bogd Khan Mountain was the world’s first national park?

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Old Faithful, at the world's first national park. Kurt Repanshek photo.

Not necessarily. A great deal depends on how you parse the evidence.

Fortunately, you can make your own decision; the evidence is before you. Simply Google up Bogd Khan Mountain, where you will find translations of the 1778 letters.

What is my opinion?

Well, neighbors, I would opt for the Scottish version of “Not Proven."

The two letters seem to describe religious practices in what looks to be an open air natural temple or place of worship of longstanding and how they might be enhanced. It is true that the lack of tree cutting or hunting is mentioned, but mainly to reinforce the idea of sacredness rather than something statutory.

Thus, it would seem that Bogd Khan Mountain is one of hundreds, perhaps thousands, of Buddhist, Hindu, or Shamanistic sacred sites scattered about Asia. Their preservation is praiseworthy and desirable, but is one of their number the “First National Park”?

Well no, that would be Yellowstone.

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Comments

First, lay off Gore, at least he spoke up about climate change.

Second, Hot Springs is the smallest and oldest of the parks in the National Park System. It dates back to 1832 when Congress established, 40 years ahead of Yellowstone, the first federally protected area in the nation's history. Hot Springs Reservation, which was renamed Hot Springs National Park in 1921, was created to protect the 47 naturally flowing thermal springs on the southwestern slope of Hot Springs Mountain.

Park, federally protected area, or national park, depends on how you look at it.

As for a indigenous peoples land, in the 1868 treaty, signed at Fort Laramie and other military posts in Sioux country, the United States recognized the Black Hills as part of the Great Sioux Reservation, set aside for exclusive use by the Sioux people. The Black hills are the Sioux Nation's, and the Supreme Court has recognized the legitimacy of the treaty. We don't give it to them because the US does not honor it's treaty with the great Sioux nation, and has offered them money instead. The Sioux do not want money, but want their sacred land back.

Talk about honoring human rights!

George Catlin is honored by naming the sacred red stone used to make calumets (peace pipes) Catlinite.


First, lay off Gore, at least he spoke up about climate change.

Yeah, as he spewed "carbon" from his private plane and spent 12-20x the average american heating his home and as he positioned himself to profit handsomely from his global warming (he didn't originally call it climate change) scam.


he positioned himself to profit handsomely from his global warming (he didn't originally call it climate change) scam.

Can you provide some facts for this? I am curious..

This too, though I know it would be less likely provable:

he spewed "carbon" from his private plane and spent 12-20x the average american heating his home


Mr.Runte,

Thank you for your post. I have not yet read your book, though it is on my list (I'm sorry,I'm still working my way through Muir). I hope to get to it soon.


Gee Dahkota, are you totally oblivious to the news?

Are you unaware he profited from the book he wrote The movie he produced? The lecture fees he recieved? His investment in http://www.generationim.com/

You aren't aware he flies in a private jet (http://faircompanies.com/blogs/view/gulfstream-greens-gore-man-vs-gore-m...). Do I have to "prove" that doesn't run on solar power?

The 12-20x power usage - try this:

http://www.snopes.com/politics/business/gorehome.asp

or this:

http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/opinion/editorials/2006-08-09-gore-g...


The "information" contained in ec's second "proof" is totally ridiculous. In about the second paragraph, the claim is made that flying a Gulfstream from Tennessee to Los Angeles will consume "about 11 to 15 thousand gallons" of jet fuel.

Preposterous.

That means the aircraft will be burning about 4700 gallons per hour. Actual fuel consumption on a Gulfstream G450 (the middle Gulfstream model) is about 400 gph. That works out to about 1.62 miles per gallon. (But I'm sure that if my little Chevy pickup was going 647 miles per hour, it wouldn't get very good fuel mileage, either.)

If the aircraft burned 4700 gph, it would have to land every 15 to 20 minutes to refuel.

Here is a link to a Gulfstream performance chart:

http://jetadvisors.com/gulfstream-g450-performance/

As for Gore profiting from his investments, I thought that's what ec is all about -- profit -- for selected people, I guess.

Thanks for another good chuckle this morning. Have a fine day.

Now back to Yellowstone. Many thanks, PJ for another of your gems. And to Dr. Runte for more background. I'll be at the library this afternoon. Gonna have to check the catalog for your books.


The "information" contained in ec's second "proof" is totally ridiculous.

Lee, once again you try to obfuscate. Does he fly in private jets? Yes. Is that less (far less) efficient than commercial flights? Yes.

The only thing I was proving in that post was that Gore uses private jets.

As for Gore profiting from his investments, I thought that's what ec is all about -- profit -- for selected people, I guess.

No you have it backwards. I am just merely pointing out Gore's hypocracy. Either he really doesn't care/believe in global warming - or is is he that believes only "selective people", i.e. not him, need to make the sacrifices.


How did Al Gore get involved in this discussion? Might as well bring up George W. Bush for all it would add to the discussion on the first national park. By the way hypocracy is as much a part of human nature as hate, love, and racism. EC could help us all by sticking to the subject.


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