Refuge Establishment
It all started when a wealthy big game hunter from Canon City, CO, traveled
to Alaska, checking out rumors of giant moose on the Kenai Peninsula. Arriving
in Cook Inlet, Dall DeWeese was told he would be fortunate to find a hunter by
the name of Andrew Berg to guide him.
DeWeese found Berg at a Kasilof
cannery and secured his services. The hunt, in the Tustumena Lake region, was
successful, with several trophy moose taken and the peninsula stamped indelibly
on DeWeese's mind. On the steamboat journey home DeWeese was already planning
his next hunt here.
Word spread of a new territory with giant moose and
white sheep, and many hunters laid plans for the season of 1898.
For those
lacking the time and financial wherewithal for an Alaskan hunt, other means of
acquiring trophies were available. At that time, there were no game regulations
whatsoever in the Territory of Alaska, and wildlife could be openly bought and
sold by anyone. Local Alaskan hunters started market hunting by killing moose
and caribou for their heads and selling them at good prices for shipment to San
Francisco and other points.
Upon DeWeese's return in the fall of 1898,
after an absence of only one year, he was surprised to see a marked decrease in
game populations. On his southbound trip, he stopped in Sitka and voiced his concerns
to the editor of the Alaskan Sitka newspaper. The next day the paper's headline
read, "ALASKAN GAME DOOMED. DALL DE WEESE THE GREAT HUNTER TELLS THE REASON."
In this article, DeWeese made a plea for game preservation in the form of hunting
laws and established game preserves.
Another big game hunter, Harry E.
Lee, traveled north in the fall of 1899 to hunt the Kenai Peninsula. Lee had a
good hunt, yet he saw problems developing with the lack of game laws. In a magazine
article Lee wrote: "I would like to suggest that the American sportsmen should
by all means try to secure this tract of land from the Government as a game preserve,
and I hope someone will take the matter in hand before another year, for the game
is wantonly killed by market hunters every winter, and if this is not soon put
a stop to, it will be entirely exterminated."
This call for preserving
the Kenai Peninsula wild game was taken up by many subsequent visiting sportsmen.
Dall
DeWeese returned to hunt in Alaska again in 1899 and 1901, and he continued his
call for wildlife preservation. In a letter to the new president, Theodore Roosevelt,
in December of 1901, DeWeese wrote: "This is a subject that appeals to every
'true-blue sportsman,' every lover of animal life, and all those who see beauty
in nature, embracing forests, plains, and mountains throughout our entire country,
and while the woods, plains, and mountains are naturally beautiful, we all agree
that they are much more grand and lifelike when the wild animals and birds are
present. There are now several organizations doing work toward the preservation
of wild animal and bird life. There is much yet for us to do; to resolve is to
act. Let us be up and at it."
Someone must have been listening, because
Teddy Roosevelt's new Forestry chief, Gifford Pinchot, sent a young forester named
William A. Langille to make a reconnaissance of the Kenai Peninsula in 1904. Langille
traversed the peninsula from Seward to Seldovia, and during this trip he realized
the unique value of the land as a wildlife and hunting preserve.
In his
1904 report, Langille expressed the opinion that on the peninsula, "there
is room for the frontier settler and fishermen on the shore land; there let them
abide in peace and prosper, but keep out the fire and wanton game destroyers."
Langille further recommended that certain portions of the proposed Kenai
Forest Reserve be specifically designated as game preserves for perpetuating the
game species of the region. He recommended that Sheep Creek at the head of Kachemak
Bay be set aside for Dall sheep, and that the Caribou Hills be set aside for moose
and the few remaining caribou. (In 1909, Langille headed up the new Alexander
Archipelago Forest Reserve, which became today's Tongass National Forest. Many
historians regard William Langille as the father of forestry in Alaska.)
Following
Langille's recommendations, the Chugach National Forest was designated on July
23, 1907, with further additions in 1909. At its maximum size, the Chugach National
Forest extended from the Copper River on the east to Cook Inlet on the west, to
Kachemak Bay on the south, and included all the Chugach Mountains to the north.
Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, hunters and conservationists continued
to press Congress to designate part of this land specifically as a wildlife preserve,
without logging, mining and other forms of development. Congress finally recognized
these voices, and a second President Roosevelt -- FDR -- signed the enabling legislation
for the Kenai National Moose Range on Dec. 16, 1941, just nine days after Pearl
Harbor.
In December 1980, the moose range was renamed the Kenai National
Wildlife Refuge, and its purposes were expanded to include all wildlife species.
Last updated: September 11, 2008
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