Grover Island - Background

Background

Grover Island’s place in history was established with its purchase by the United States for the country’s first national forest preserve. It was bought at the direction of President John Adams in 1799 as the first of several preserves for live oak timber. At that time, live oak was a valuable timber in the U.S., used to build ships such as the USS Constitution, the ship known as Old Ironsides because of the strength of its live oak framing. The federal government recognized the critical importance of a continuing supply of this timber for the U.S. Navy, and took action to maintain a sustainable source by establishing these preserves.

Not only was Grover Island the nation’s first national forest preserve, it was probably the very first land set aside by the federal government for any conservation purpose, being established well before any of our national parks, national monuments, national wildlife refuges, or national forests. Grover Island could rightfully be termed the nation’s first national forest, as the preserve was in existence more than ninety years before the creation of any of the forest preserves that we currently call “national forest”.

In 1926, no longer needed for its live oak in an age of steel, Grover Island was sold into private hands.

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