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Subject:
From:
Angela R Cope <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Maps, Air Photo, GIS Forum - Map Librarianship
Date:
Wed, 24 Mar 2010 18:13:19 -0500
Content-Type:
text/plain
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From: Douglas Helms [[log in to unmask]]
Date sent: 19 Mar 2010

SUBJECT:
Distribution of  Hugh Hammond Bennett and the Creation of the Soil Conservation Service, September 19, 1933 - April 27, 1935.  Historical Insights Number 9 (Washington, DC: Natural Resources Conservation Service, March 2010).
PDF version
http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/about/history/articles/hugh_hammond_bennett_and_the_creation_of_the_soil_conservation_service.pdf
HTML version
http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/about/history/articles/hugh_hammond_bennett_and_the_creation_of_the_soil_conservation_service.html

 April 27, 2010, will mark the 75th anniversary of the passage of PL 46 of the 74th Congress which created the Soil Conservation Service.  This  article discusses the events of September 19, 1933, to April 27, 1935, during which time Hugh Hammond Bennett and colleagues in the Soil Erosion Service in the Department of the Interior established demonstration projects. The young agency weathered questions about their authority to work on private lands. The U. S. Department of Agriculture and state agricultural institutions argued that this work belonged in USDA. Throughout the controversies the cadre of soil conservationists won approval in the countryside and thereby built support in Congress for expansion of the soil conservation work on a permanent basis. The pending expiration of SES's emergency employment funding in June 1935 gave an air of urgency to legislation for a permanent agency. Finally, drought in the Great Plains and dust clouds sweeping eastward to the federal city dramatically demonstrated the need for soil conservation.


Douglas Helms
Resource Economics
  and Social Sciences Division
National Historian
USDA/NRCS/
Washington, DC
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