- Pinchot-Ballinger Controversy
The Pinchot-Ballinger Controversy was a dispute between
U.S. Forest Service ChiefGifford Pinchot andU.S. Secretary of the Interior Richard Achilles Ballinger that contributed to the split of the Republican Party before the 1912 Presidential Election and helped to define the U.S.conservation movement in the early 20th century.Ballinger's appointment
In March 1909, President
William Howard Taft began his administration by replacingTheodore Roosevelt 's appointedSecretary of the Interior James Rudolph Garfield (son of the assassinated Republican president,James Garfield ) withRichard Ballinger , a formerMayor of Seattle who had served asCommissioner of theGeneral Land Office (GLO) under Secretary Garfield. Ballinger's appointment was a disappointment to conservationists, who interpreted the replacement of Garfield as a break with Roosevelt administration policies on conservationism. Within weeks of taking office, Ballinger reversed some of Garfield's policies, restoring 3 million acres (12,000 km²) to private use.Citation
last = Ganoe
first = John T.
title = Some Constitutional and Political Aspects of the Ballinger-Pinchot Controversy
journal = The Pacific Historical Review
volume = 3
issue = 3
pages = 323
date = September
year = 1934 ]Allegations by Pinchot and Glavis
By July 1909,
Gifford Pinchot , who had been appointed by PresidentWilliam McKinley to head the USDADivision of Forestry in 1898, and who had run theU.S. Forest Service since it had taken over management of forest reserves from theGeneral Land Office in 1905, became convinced that Ballinger intended to "stop the conservation movement". In August, speaking at the annual meeting of the National Irrigation Congress inSpokane, Washington , he accused Ballinger of siding with private trusts in his handling ofwater power issues. At the same time, he helped to arrange a meeting between President Taft and Louis Glavis, chief of thePortland, Oregon Field Division of the GLO. Glavis met with the president at Taft's summer retreat inBeverly, Massachusetts and presented him with a 50-page report accusing Ballinger of an improper interest in his handling ofcoal field claims inAlaska .Glavis claimed that Ballinger, first as
Commissioner of the General Land Office, and then asSecretary of the Interior , had interfered with investigations of coal claim purchases made by Clarence Cunningham ofIdaho . In 1907, Cunningham had partnered with the Morgan-Guggenheim "Alaska Syndicate" to developcoal interests inAlaska . The GLO had launched ananti-trust investigation, headed by Glavis. Ballinger, then head of the GLO, rejected Glavis' findings and removed him from the investigation. In 1908, Ballinger stepped down from the GLO, and took up a private law practice inSeattle . Cunningham became a client.Convinced that Ballinger, now head of the
United States Department of Interior , had a personal interest in obstructing an investigation of the Cunningham case, Glavis had sought support from theU.S. Forest Service , whose jurisdiction over theChugach National Forest included several of the Cunningham claims. He received a sympathetic response from Alexander Shaw, Overton Price and Pinchot, who helped him to prepare the presentation for Taft.cite book
last = Miller
first = Char
title = Gifford Pinchot and the Making of Modern Environmentalism
publisher =Island Press
date = 2001
pages = 208-211
isbn = 1559638222 ]Dismissals, investigations and scandal
Taft consulted with Attorney General
George Wickersham before issuing a public letter in September, exonerating Ballinger and authorizing the dismissal of Glavis on grounds of insubordination. At the same time, Taft tried to conciliate Pinchot and affirm his administration's pro-conservation stance.Glavis took his case to the press. In November, "
Collier's Weekly " published an article elaborating his allegations, entitled "The Whitewashing of Ballinger: Are the Guggenheims in Charge of the Department of the Interior?"In January 1910, Pinchot sent an open letter to Senator
Jonathan P. Dolliver , who read it into theCongressional Record . Pinchot praised Glavis as a "patriot", openly rebuked Taft, and asked for Congressional hearings into the propriety of Ballinger's dealings. Pinchot was promptly fired, but from January to May, theUnited States House of Representatives held hearings on Ballinger. Ballinger was cleared of any wrongdoing, but criticized from some quarters for favoring private enterprise and the exploitation of natural resources over conservationism.Consequences
The firing of Pinchot, a close friend of Teddy Roosevelt, alienated many progressives within the Republican party and drove a wedge between Taft and Roosevelt himself, leading to the split of the Republican Party in the 1912 presidential election.
Many historianswho?|date=September 2007 have commented on the
Constructionist view of the executive exemplified by Ballinger and Taft, and the stronger executive advanced with moral arguments by Pinchot and Roosevelt.Notes
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