From collection Creating Acadia National Park: The George B. Dorr Research Archive of Ronald H. Epp

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The Antiquities Act (1906) and National Monuments
The Antiquities Act (1906)
and National Monements
Hal Rothman
The Antiquities Act and
National Monuments
A Progressive Conservation Legacy
T
he Antiquities Act of June 8,
only that national monuments should "be con-
1906, may be the most impor-
fined to the smallest area compatible with the
tant piece of preservation legisla-
proper care and management of the objects to be
tion ever enacted by the United
protected." (As noted in the articles by
States government. Although its title suggests a
McManamon and Browning, p. 19, and
limited focus on archeological matters, in practice
Mackintosh, p. 41, the act also outlawed unautho-
the law became a cornerstone of preservation in
rized disturbance or removal of cultural features
the federal system. By allowing Presidents extra-
on federal lands and set penalties for offenders.)
ordinary power to preserve cultural and "scien-
The first 10 national monuments, pro-
tific" features on public land, it created a mecha-
claimed by President Theodore Roosevelt
nism for rapid decisionmaking concerning the
between September 1906 and January 1908, were
disposition of federal lands. The category of park
largely compatible with congressional expecta-
areas established under its auspices, the national
tions. Only Petrified Forest National Monument
monuments, became the most diverse and varied
in Arizona topped 15,000 acres; most were far
collection under federal administration. At times
smaller. But after 1907, when Congress curtailed
the monument category seemed a storehouse of
the President's power under similar legislation to
President
places with a chance at eventual national park
Theodore
status, other places with significant attributes but
Roosevelt in
lacking the spectacular qualities associated with
Yellowstone
national parks, and a number of curiosities added
National Park,
1903. Roosevelt
to the park system as a result of political porkbar-
signed the
reling.
Antiquities Act
The passage of the Act in 1906 answered an
and ran with it.
National Park
important need in a culture trying to define itself.
Service photo.
At the beginning of the 20th century, European
Americans retained a self-induced cultural inferi-
ority from their relatively short history. Natural
wonders and prehistoric ruins testified to a longer
American past and afforded a heritage that could
be compared to that of Europe with its ancient
castles and temples. Amid this cultural national-
ism and the contemporary pillaging of archeolog-
ical remains in the Southwest, it became vital to
protect such features from depredation and
exploitation. Hence the Antiquities Act.
No piece of legislation invested more power
in the presidency than the Antiquities Act. Its
vaguely defined scope, encompassing "objects of
historic or scientific interest," made it an unparal-
leled tool. Its congressional advocates anticipated
that it would not be used to reserve more than
160-acre quarter-sections surrounding archeolog-
ical remains on public lands, but the act stated
16
CRM No 4-1999
later act to incorporate both of these large
national monuments in even larger national
parks, a pattern that followed with many other
monuments over the years.
Roosevelt's expansive, precedent-setting
application of a vague law helped make it the
most effective conservation tool ever enacted by
Congress. National monuments became the cate-
gory of choice in numerous situations: when a
threat to public land loomed large; when
Congress refused to act or opposed a conserva-
tion measure; when land clearly would be valu-
able to the nation in the future but little reason
to reserve it existed in the present. With the
Antiquities Act, a President had tremendous dis-
cretion. Congress could not hold the chief execu-
tive hostage in conservation matters, could not
force a compromise on an unwilling President,
and could not prevent a President from imple-
President Bill
proclaim national forests, Roosevelt reacted by
menting an agenda on public land (except by
Clinton's 1996
more broadly defining the Antiquities Act's lan-
withholding funds).
proclamation of
Grand
guage regarding "objects of scientific interest"
The Antiquities Act embodied all things
Staircase-
and the extent of the reservations necessary to
Progressive. It centralized power in the hands of a
Escalante
protect them.
responsible few to act in the public interest. It
National
Monument in
On January 11, 1908, Roosevelt proclaimed
represented a shared vision of American society-
Utah triggered
806,400 acres of the Grand Canyon as a national
the name "national monument" clearly reflected a
local opposition
monument. With a stroke of his pen, he reserved
vision of the progressive nation. And it relied on
and congres-
an area far exceeding the expectations of even the
experts to make determinations that had once
sional efforts (so
far unsuccessful)
most avid supporters of the Antiquities Act.
been made by laymen. If the law and those who
to curtail the
Roosevelt responded to the threat that a local
enacted and implemented it seemed arrogant, it
executive
man planned to build a tramway from the rim to
was because they reflected the wholehearted con-
authority
granted by the
the bottom of the canyon. The rim was dotted
fidence of the time: they knew best and they only
Antiquities Act.
with mining claims, which served as bases for pri-
sought the best for all.
Controversial
vate tourist development. At the height of the
The Antiquities Act became the initial legal
national monu-
ment proclama-
Progressive Era, when many favored public over
authority for the majority of park areas estab-
tions in
private solutions, an icon sacred to turn-of-the-
lished before 1933. The monuments proclaimed
Wyoming and
century Americans faced privatization. Roosevelt,
by Presidents under it included large natural
Alaska earlier led
armed with the Antiquities Act, stood in the way.
areas, prehistoric ruins, geologic features, historic
Congress to
restrict the Act's
The Grand Canyon proclamation revealed
sites, and other features of general interest. The
use in those
the breadth of this seemingly innocuous legisla-
flexibility built into the law remained an asset: as
states. Bureau
tion. While national parks had to be established
accepted ideas about what constituted important
of Land
Management
by individual acts of Congress, the Antiquities
parts of America's cultural and natural heritage
photo.
Act allowed the President to circumvent the fun-
changed, the Antiquities Act remained a mal-
damentally languid nature of congressional delib-
leable tool to fulfill new objectives.
erations and instantaneously achieve results he
Even after its application declined in the
believed were in the public interest. By taking full
1940s as a result of controversial uses, the
advantage of the Act, Roosevelt set important
Antiquities Act remained the best way to quickly
precedents for his successors. On March 2, 1909,
reserve threatened public lands. In 1978, faced
two days before leaving office, he gave his con-
with the collapse of negotiations seeking to deter-
gressional opponents one final twist by reserving
mine which Alaskan lands would be included in
more than 630,000 acres of the Olympic
federal protective systems and a firm deadline
Peninsula in Washington State as Mount
after which the process would have to begin
Olympus National Monument. Congress did
again, President Jimmy Carter resorted to the
CRM No 4-1999
17
Antiquities Act. He used it to proclaim 15 new
Park Service. A few were transferred earlier;
national monuments and make substantial addi-
Grand Canyon came to Interior in 1919 when it
tions to two others. In 1980, Carter signed the
became a national park, for example.
Alaskan National Interest Lands Conservation
Since 1933 the Interior Department has
Act, which converted most of these monuments
overseen virtually all national monuments. Today
to national parks and preserves. Comprising
it has 74 areas bearing this designation: 73
more than 47 million acres, these additions to the
administered by the National Park Service, and
national park system more than doubled its size.
the newest one-Grand Staircase-Escalante in
Two of the new Alaska monuments were assigned
Utah, proclaimed by President Clinton in
to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and were
1996-administered by the Bureau of Land
converted to national wildlife refuges.
Management. Not all of them resulted from pres-
Despite its custody of the public domain,
idential proclamations under the Antiquities Act;
the Department of the Interior was not initially
some were directly established by Congress. But
responsible for all national monuments. Some,
the designation remains closely associated with
including Grand Canyon and Mount Olympus,
this powerful conservation tool of the Progressive
were proclaimed on lands previously reserved as
Era, whose legacy to Interior and the American
national forests and assigned to the Department
people has been vast.
of Agriculture. Others were proclaimed on mili-
tary reservations administered by the War
Hal Rothman is a professor of history at the University of
Department. Most of these monuments
Nevada, Las Vegas, and editor of Environmental History.
His books include America's National Monuments: The
remained under those departments until 1933,
when President Franklin D. Roosevelt transferred
Politics of Preservation (University Press of Kansas, 1994)
and Devil's Bargains: Tourism in the Twentieth Century
them by executive order to Interior's National
American West (University Press of Kansas, 1998).
Anthropological Connections
P
laces defined as national patrimony do not stop being local patrimony. In the National Park Service,
mounting anthropological evidence demonstrates the connections that persist between present-day peoples
and the resources their ancestors used, manufactured, and valued. Although now incorporated into parks and catego-
rized as sites, structures, objects and landscapes, these "national" resources are also crucial markers of a people's own
ethnic history and identity.
Even the meanings local people assign to ostensibly identical resources can reflect diversity. The resources at
Cane River Creole National Historical Park in Louisiana, for example, offer special opportunities to explore relation-
ships between plantation systems and people in different cultural and political niches. Two plantations are included
there, one with a complex of farm outbuildings and the worker quarters that were occupied by enslaved black people
from about the mid-1800s until abolition, and then by black
laborers until the mid-1900s. The other has a "Big House" and
the Quarters that black former enslaved laborers and sharecrop-
pers occupied. Ethnographic interviewing of the white French-
creole heirs of each plantation highlighted their strong sense of
ethnic history, culture, lineage, and the pride they invested in the
Big Houses and economically viable enterprises. Former laborers
and sharecroppers emphasized pride in their hard work in the
Quarters at Cane River Creole National Historical Park.
Photo by the author.
fields or behind the Big Houses and in their kitchens. There was
conviction about their own contributions to the plantations' eco-
nomic successes. They associated specific families with cabins in the Quarters, and stressed the neighborly coopera-
tion and celebrations that enriched their lives and created a community. Thus, systematic ethnographic attention to
local groups and differences among them indicates that seemingly identical cultural resources, despite fixed bound-
aries and objective measures, are valued in different ways by different traditional users. Indeed, identifying diverse
perspectives wherever Native Americans, African Americans, and others are associated with park resources has guided
the applied ethnography program since its start in 1981.
Muriel "Miki" Crespi
Chief Ethnographer, NPS
18
CRM No 4-1999
National Park Service History: History of the National Park Service
Page 1 of 2
History
Links to the Past Search
National Park Service
Home
National Park
Preservine Nature
8333
Service
Motions Parks
History
History of the National Park Service
Online
Books
A History of Mission 66 (pdf)
A Public Face for Science: A. Starker Leopold and the Leopold
Historical
Report (pdf)
Themes
Antiquities Act and National Monuments (pdf)
Birthdays of the National Park Service
Brief History of the National Park Service
Maritime
Brief History of Mapping the National Parks
History
Chief Historians of the National Park Service
Congress Debates Hetch Hetchy
Directors of the National Park Service
Research
Evolution of the Conservation Movement, 1850-1920
and
Education
Exit Interview with Barry Mackintosh (pdf)
Former National Park System Units: An Analysis
Glance Back in Time (MWAC History)
Oral
Historic Listings of National Park Service Officials
History
History of National Park Service Museums
History of the U.S. Department of the Interior
Interpreting Women's History in the National Park Service (pdf)
List of National Park Administrative History Reports
National Forests vs. National Parks, 1914-1925
The National Park Service Act of 1916: A Contradictory Mandate
National Parks and Education: The First Twenty Years
National Park Service Program of Conservation for Areas and
Structures of National Historical Significance
National Park System Timeline
National Park System Timeline (Annotated)
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/hisnps/NPShistory.htm
5/3/2004
V
Mr. Dorr's address at the Building of rts on August
22, 1916, in celebration of the estsblishment of the Sieur
de Monts National Monument.
He was presented by President Eliot, who, with others
also spoke.
Mr. Dorr
1/ Mr. Chairman:
My thought turns forward, rather, to the
great opportunity that springs from what is now achieved,
than back toward the past, save for the memory of those
I would were here to be glad with us at this first stage
attained. It is an opportunity of singular interest, so
to devel op and preserve the wild charm and beauty of a spot
thus honored by the Nation that future generations may
rejoice in them yet more than we; and so to conserve, and
where there is need restore, the wild life whose native
haunt it is that all may find delight in it, and men of
science a uniquely interesting field for study.
"For both purposes we need more land, as anyone may
see by studying the Park and Reservation bounds on Dr.
Abbe's wonderfully illiminating relief map. We have
begun an important work; we have succeeded until the Nation
itself has taken cognizance of it and joined with us
for its advancement; let us not stop short of its fulfillment
in essential points. Adequate approaches to the National
Monument, which men and women from the country over will
henceforth come to see, should be secured. The areas
adjoining it that are fertile in wild life- exceptional
forest tracts, wild orchid meadows and natural wild-flower:
areas of other type, the pools haunted by W ter-loving
birds, and the deep, well-wooded and well-watered valleys
that lie between the mountains -- are necessary to include
in order to make the Park what it should be, a sanctuary
2.
and protecting home for the whole region's plant and
animal life, and for the birds that ask its hospitality upon
their long migrations. Make it this, and naturalists will
seek it from the whole world over, and from it other men
will learn similarly to cherish wild life in other places.
"The influence of such work, beneficent in every
aspect, travels far; and many, beholding it, will go
hence as missionaries to extend it. We have a wonderful
landscape, to deepen the impression, and, now that the
Government has set its seal of high approval on it, wide
publicity will be given to all that we accomplish.
"By taking the opportunity given us by the richly
varied topography of the Island, by its situatio. on the
border between land and sea, by the magnificent beginning
made, and the Government's co-operation, we can do something
now whose influence will be widely felt. And here I wish
to say a word which falls in singularly well with the thought
of the far-reaching influence this work may have.
Charles Eliot, Dr. Eliot's older son, was a
landscape architect of rare ability and enthusiasm. Moved
by a public spirit that he derived alike from his own
nature and the home influences that helped to form him,
he initiated in Massachusetts the sustem of Public Reser-
vations on which our own was modelled. To him Mount Desert
owes that debt of leadership, while he, in turn, might
never have been awakened to the value and importance of
such work had it not been for the inspiration, the love
of nature and the quickened consciousness of beauty,
drawn from boyhood summers passed upon it.
During the early summer, when I was at Washington
working on this matter of the Park's establishment and
was plunged for weeks together in its oppresive heat, it
struck me what a splendid and useful thing it would be
if we could provide down here, in a spot SO full of
biologic interest and unsolved biologic problems, so rich
in various beauty and locked around by a cool norhhern
sea, a summer camp -- some simple summer home -- for men
of science orking in the Government Bureaus, in the
musuems and universities. They would come down to work,
as Henry Chapman and Charles Sedgwick Ninot used to do, on
a fresh field of life, bird or plant or animal, and then
go back invigorated, ready to do more valuable work the
whole winter through in consequence of this climatic boon
and stimulating change.
3.
/This is one opportunity. Another, which is urgent, is
to
secure now, while it may be done, tracts of special biologic
interest not yet secured, irreplaceable if lost in private
ownership or through destruction of their natural conditions,
as well as adequate approaches to the National Park, con-
venient and scenically worthy of the national possession to
which they lead. Bot of these are essentially important
at this time. No one who h ad not made the study of it which
I have can realize howtruly wonderful the opportunities are
which the creation of this Park has opened, alike in wild life
ways and splendid scenery. To lose by want of action now
what will be SO precious to the future, whether for the
delight of men or as a means to study, would be no less
than tragic.
Do not, therefore, look on w hat has been accomplished
as other than a first step attained upon a longer way,
which whould be dollowed only the more keenly for the
national co-operation that has been secured, the national
recognition won.
#
Mr. Dorr's dictation, April 18, referring to
Buildin of Arts and the meeting in celebration of the
establishment of the Monument, at Buildin of Arts, on
August 22, 1916.
When the meeting was over and we had some ut
upon the lawn, Mrs. Delano Hitch came to me and said:
"What is there that I might do to help? I would
like to do something."
And I, with my Wild Gardens plan still in mind,
said:
"If you would really like to do some thing, the thing
I most would like would be to take one of my Wild Garden
areas and develop it in a way to tell what I have in mind."
And she replied that she would be glad to do it.
After some study of the possibilities then within my
reach, and with the thought of making Sieur de Monts
Spring the center of a Wild Gardens group, I chose the
valley that the brock from the Tarn has washed out from
the glacial gravel deposit left by the melting ice sheet
across the outlet to the Gorge between the steep-cliffed
through
forming the Gorge
mountainsbetweon
which,
XXXXX
the ice
had torn its seaward way.
2.
This forms an exceedingly picturesque valley, just suited
to the purpose, between the open Tarn above and the
Sieur de Monts Spring below I described it to Mrs
Hitch, who could walk but little and her brother,
Mr. Frederick Delano, who was with her at Bar Harbor,
went out with me and looked it over. We decided it might
take $5,000 in constructive work to shape it for my
plan and make a bottom for it of good loam, ready for
my Wild Gardens planting, and Mr. Delano said he would
not advise his sister to undertake it without putting
aside at least as much in endowment for its planting and
aftercare. They left so on afterwards and Mrs. Hitch
sent me her her check for two thousand dollars which
was all I felt I could wisely accept at the time to commence
work on it, which I gradually expended in the years
that followed. But new problems relating to the
future ownership of the land of which it, the Tarn and the
Spring all formed a part, arose and confronted me with
difficulties which it took lon to solve with confidence
as to 1/2 he future.
3.
While this was the condition still and I was
stru ling with the problems that the development of the
National Park created, she died and I received a letter
some time afterward frowMr. Delano, asking if his sister ha
made any commitment involving any completion of the plan.
I wrote him that there had been no legal commitment at any
time, that the delay had been unavoi dable, caused by
matters beyond my control but that all had been done
that his sister's
interest had made possible and that
I had added as much more to it myself; that time had only
and
added to the interest and distinction of it/should he
wish as her executor to continue the plan in accor ance with
the original design, I should be glad.
To this Mr. Delano made no reply. And I have never
heard fro him since. There the matter has rested so far
&
as the Delano family is concerned. The vally, which I with
difficulty protected from road invasion and other use,
makes, even in its present state, a beautiful feature at
an increasingly important point within the Park, visited
annually by many thousands who come to the Spring and some
day what is needed to carry out the original plan will be
done by the Government if I and my plans have influence to brie
it about.
Steorder Monts Notomal
Note: This appears tob the messing
Monument by G.B.DORR
"Histrical Assoe "achidein SMP
The Sieur do Monts National Monument on the coast of Maine
is the only tional park, other than battle-site memorial, in the
eastern portion of our country It was formed by the gift of oitizens
and accepted by the President for its historic interests.no less than
for its unique and struking coastal landscape. Its deeply divided
range of granite mountains, bare-topped with darkly no oded bases, was
the first feature noted by Champlain In his exploration of our coast,
made - in September, 1604 - from Do Monta' first colony at the mouth
of the present Saint Croix River - named for it - in the Wounding of
Acadia; and Mount Desert Island, the 'island of the wild and solitary
mountains!, was the first land he touched within the present bounds
of the United States.
Nine years later, in 1613, the Island became the chosen
cite of the first French missionary colony planted on the American Con-
tinent, settlement being made at the entrance to Somes Sound, at the
mountains' southern foot.
This settlement, whose story is told at considerable length
in the Jesuit Narratives by Father Biard, one of the loaders of the ex-
pedition, was named by them, as the fog-cloud they arrived in lifted,
disclosing the peaceful beauty of the soenes Saint Sauveur - in gratitude,
as it is stated, for the Divine guidance which had load them across &
dangerous and unchartered sea to a spot so fair. It was the later
wreaking of this settlement, together with a succeeding attack upon
the opposite Nova Sootian shore, by an armed vessel from Virginia
commended by Samuel Argall, that commenced, according to Parkman,
the century and a half of warfare between the French and English
for the control of North America; and for & century of this, until
the Peace of Utreaht in 1713, the broad, land-locked bay that
bounds Mount Desert Island on the oastern side and is still known
as Frenchman's Bay was the recognised gathering-place of Tessels
for naval expeditions by the French against the English and rendez-
vous for their return.
Two generations later Mount Desert Island was dooded in
fendal fashion by Louis XIV to Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac, a
soldier of anoient family in France then serving in Acadia and
later to become the founder of Detroit and Governor of Louisiana.
He is recorded as living on the island with his wife in 1688, on
the shore of Frenchman's Bay, in a memorandum drawn up in that year
by Sir Edmand Andros for the English government, with reference to
a descent on the Acadian coast.
Ceded to England with the rest of Acadia save Cape Breton
by the Peace of Utreaht, the Island ultimately passed into the
possession of Nassaohnsetts, which whilo yet a provinoo gave it to
its last Colonial Governor, Sir Francis Bernard, in reward for
2
securing to It that portion of Aoadia which now forms part of Maine,
against the rival claims of Nova Sootia; and after confiscation of
his property in the Revolution, returned its western half to his son,
John Bernard, and gave its eastern half to the granddaughter of
Cadillao and her husband, Monsieur and Madame do Gregoiro - French
refugees, who came out to America bringing letters from Lafayette -
who thereupon came down and lived, and died, on it, becoming oi tizons
of the United States.
From these two gifts of Thesachnsetts, both proceeding from
earlier ones by the Crown's of France and England, it is that the
titles to the land the government now holds, to both the eastward
and the westward of Somes Sound, proceed.
with these and other old historical associations linking
the new Park with France, and with its own broad outlook over the
868.8 toward her, it is planned to make it serve a unique runotion
among our national parks, and embody in its lands and mountains an
enduring memory of France's old relation to the land and of our friend-
ship and alliance, past and present, with her. In accordance with
this plan, warmly supported by the present Secretary of the Interior,
the Hon. Franklin K. Lane, Senator Halo of Maine has introduced &
bill, already passed by the Senate and favorably acted on by the
Public Lands Committee of the House, to change the Sieur de Monts
National Monument, proclaimed by the President two years ago, into
3
& national park under the name of the Iafayotto National Park, chosen
to express the broadth and inclusiveness of the commemorative inten-
tion. And the United States Geographic Commission, whose practice
is habitually most conservative, has revised in harmony with this
plan the names of certain of the mountains in the Park and given them
others related to the Islan's early history - Champlain, Cadillac,
Aoadin, and Do Monts are all recorded in this www.while the mountain
near whose foot the early Joquit settlement was made, has been named
in momory of it Saint Sanvour Mountain. The site of this missionary
settlement, still known as Jesuit Field locally, is a broad grassland
sloping gently to the sea at the entrance to Somes Sound and looking,
it would seem, not greatly different from what it did when the Jesuits
and their colonists game sailing in. A fine harbor, noted as such
by Governor Bornard in his still extant account, lies in front of it,
sholtered by lesser islands, and the mountains make its background.
There are few spots in the world of greater beauty in its northern type,
and Low - apart from ofties - more certain to be widely visited in years
to some. Nor could my be more fitly chosen to commemorate in a national
way these early missionaries, the story of whose steadfastness and do-
votion forms BO striking a chapter in that of the early French occupation
of this Continent.
In commemorating, accordingly, other features of the Island's
early history, those who have the development of this first eastern
4
Kolanal Part in charge depire to Commemorate 1100 where it
took place this first beginning of these missionary labors,
and the sacrifice and hardship they involved. And that 10
warthilly and rightly done, respectfully invito the
Benior Cardinal in this country of the Cathollo Church to ap-
point a 8 Attoo of laymen from its ranics to cooperate with
them
in establishing on the dite described, on land now
nationally owned and at the crowning point of beauty on our
coast, a dignified and appropriate memorial, 1A harmony with
others of historio character intended in the Park, and in
with its Landscape setting.
Before formally extending this invitation, as is
now. done, desirence that such a step would be consonant with
Not dnemon! views and wishes has been informally obtained,
and has expressed in a personal interview his warm
interest in the, plan.
5
note They page peoliar in its affort to involve
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The Antiquities Act (1906) and National Monuments
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1906