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Aldo Leopold
“As a society, we are just now beginning
to realize the depth of Leopold’s work
and thinking.”
- Mike Dombeck, Chief Emeritus U.S. Forest
Service, Professor of
Global Environmental Management UW-Stevens Point, UW System
Fellow of Global Conservation
Considered by many as the father of wildlife management
and of the United States’ wilderness system, Aldo Leopold was
a conservationist, forester, philosopher, educator, writer, and outdoor
enthusiast.
Born in 1887 and raised in Burlington, Iowa, Aldo
Leopold developed an interest in the natural world at an early age,
spending hours observing, journaling, and sketching his surroundings.
Graduating from the Yale Forest School in 1909, he eagerly pursued
a career with the newly established U.S. Forest Service in Arizona
and New Mexico. By the age of 24, he had been promoted to the post
of Supervisor for the Carson National Forest in New Mexico. In 1922,
he was instrumental in developing the proposal to manage the Gila
National Forest as a wilderness area, which became the first such
official designation in 1924.
Following a transfer to Madison, Wisconsin
in 1924, Leopold continued his investigations into ecology and
the philosophy of conservation, and in 1933 published the first textbook
in the field of wildlife management. Later that year he accepted
a new chair in game management – a
first for the University of Wisconsin and the nation.
In 1935,
he and his family initiated their own ecological restoration experiment
on a worn-out farm along the Wisconsin River outside of Baraboo,
Wisconsin. Planting thousands of pine trees, restoring prairies,
and documenting the ensuing changes in the flora and fauna further
informed and inspired Leopold.
A prolific writer, authoring articles
for professional journals and popular magazines, Leopold conceived
of a book geared for general audiences examining humanity’s
relationship to the natural world. Unfortunately, just one week after
receiving word that his manuscript would be published, Leopold experienced
a heart attack and died on April 21, 1948 while fighting a neighbor’s
grass fire that escaped and threatened the Leopold farm and surrounding
properties. A little more than a year after his death Leopold’s
collection of essays A Sand County Almanac was published. With
over two million copies sold, it is one of the most respected
books about the environment ever published, and Leopold has come
to be regarded by many as the most influential conservation thinker
of the twentieth century.
Leopold’s legacy continues to inform and inspire us to see
the natural world
“as a community to which we belong.”
Download printable Aldo Leopold Fact
Sheet (2-page
pdf file)
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