|
|
Ballinger-Pinchot Controversy |
Named head of the Forest Service in 1898, Gifford
Pinchot was instrumental in defining and implementing conservation
policies under Roosevelt, which included the scientific management of
the nations forests as well as developing the commercial value of public
lands. To realize his
visions, Pinchot relied on a network of cooperative government agencies. He enjoyed a close relationship with Roosevelt and the President's support for scientific forestry. However, the election of
Taft in 1908 threatened to undermine Pinchots work under Roosevelt. Pinchot no longer enjoyed a close personal relationship with the incumbent President. Worse, for Pinchot's viewpoint, in
1909, Taft convinced former Commissioner of the General Land Office, Richard Ballinger, to become Secretary of the Department of the
Interior. Ballinger, unsympathetic to Pinchots views, deemed some of
Pinchots cooperative agreements illegal and favored private
development of lands over withdrawing sites for public programs.
|
Source: Philadelphia North American,
reprinted in Colliers, Dec. 4, 1909 |
The strained tensions between
the Forest Service and the Department of the Interior exploded when in the early fall of 1909, an agent of the Department of the
Interior, Louis Glavis charged Ballinger with improperly pushing through
a potentially fraudulent Alaskan coal claim without
thorough investigation. Glavis
turned to Pinchot for help; Pinchot in turn eagerly seized the
opportunity to discredit his antagonist,
Ballinger. The news of the
charges quickly became
public and the conflict became known as the Ballinger-Pinchot
controversy. |
In January of the following year, Pinchot
had a congressional ally, Senator Dolliver of Iowa, read to Congress a
defense of the Forest Service that contained thinly veiled attacks on
Ballinger and the President. Pinchot
was promptly fired by Taft for his insubordination. In the ensuing
public relations battled, initiated by Pinchot, Pinchot skillfully
manipulated public opinion to taint Ballinger with suspicions of corrup-
tion. Meanwhile, Pinchot was heralded as the defender of the
public good. Ballinger was
exone- rated by the President and a Congressional investigation but
in the public's eye Ballinger's credibility remained suspect. Ballinger quit his position in March 1911, citing health
problems, and he never recovered from the damage done to his reputation.
The
controversy blurred and over- simplified complex conservation issues by
leading people to see them in terms of conflicting personalities and
ideological stereotypes of "the public" versus "the
interests. Nevertheless, the controversy had
serious political
implications for the eventual split between Taft and Roosevelt. |
|

Source: St. Paul Dispatch, reprinted in Collier's, Dec. 4, 1909 |
|

Source: Chicago Tribune, Dec. 8, 1910 This cartoonist clearly
thought the investigation of Ballinger was a whitewash. |
|
|
|