Cradle of Forestry in Pisgah Forest, North Carolina
The Cradle of Forestry, located within North Carolina's Pisgah National Forest, is the historical epicenter of professional forest management in the United States. And for good reason: It’s where the country’s first school of forestry was established, by Dr. Carl Alwin Schenck, a German forester.
Schenck was hired in 1895 by George Washington Vanderbilt II, the owner of Biltmore outside of Asheville, to bring a rigorous European scientific approach to the Appalachian wilderness. He inherited land scarred by years of indiscriminate logging and focused on a dual mission: restoration and economic viability. Schenck believed that "forestry is best which pays best," arguing that for conservation to succeed long-term, it had to be a profitable business model. (Later in life, he said that “forestry is a good thing but love is better.”)
Faced with a lack of trained professionals to manage Vanderbilt’s vast holdings, Schenck founded the Biltmore Forest School in 1898, offering a one-year intensive course that emphasized fieldwork over traditional classroom study. His students, often living in rustic cabins, spent their mornings in lectures and their afternoons performing hands-on labor: planting seedlings, felling timber, and managing nurseries. Until it closed in 1913, the school produced more than 300 graduates who became the pioneers of the burgeoning U.S. Forest Service and private timber industry.
In 1968, Congress officially designated 6,500 acres of this land as the Cradle of Forestry in America National Historic Site to commemorate Schenck’s contributions.
Today, the site remains a vibrant hub for conservation education, and it is now operated by FIND Outside, a national nonprofit that runs outdoor parks in North Carolina, Georgia, and Kentucky. The Biltmore Campus Trail consists of 3 miles of paved trails that give an idea of what life would have been like for a forestry student in that time period. Another trail provides examples of logging technology from the early 1900s, including a 1914 Climax locomotive. And a museum called the Discovery Center enables visitors to learn about what forest management entails: from soil science to hydrology to silviculture—the growth and cultivation of trees.
Clinton Wickers, the site manager for the Cradle of Forestry, says that FIND Outside has been in partnership with the Forest Service for more than 50 years. He notes that some of the artifacts of the forestry school did some traveling themselves.
“There are actual wood slabs that Gifford Pinchot [Schenck’s predecessor at the Biltmore property] took to the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair, and they're all samples of trees from North Carolina," he says. Interactive features that visitors can experience at the Discovery Center include a helicopter simulator: "Folks can sit in the cockpit of the helicopter and watch a film, and kind of it moves as if the blades are changing, and people can see what it would be like to be a part of a firefighting crew.”
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