[Theodore Roosevelt by Theodore Roosevelt]@TWC D-Link book
Theodore Roosevelt

CHAPTER XI
26/44

It was completed in six months.

It laid squarely before the American people the essential facts regarding our natural resources, when facts were greatly needed as the basis for constructive action.

This report was presented to the Joint Conservation Congress in December, at which there were present Governors of twenty States, representatives of twenty-two State Conservation Commissions, and representatives of sixty National organizations previously represented at the White House conference.
The report was unanimously approved, and transmitted to me, January 11, 1909.

On January 22, 1909, I transmitted the report of the National Conservation Commission to Congress with a Special Message, in which it was accurately described as "one of the most fundamentally important documents ever laid before the American people." The Joint Conservation Conference of December, 1908, suggested to me the practicability of holding a North American Conservation Conference.

I selected Gifford Pinchot to convey this invitation in person to Lord Grey, Governor General of Canada; to Sir Wilfrid Laurier; and to President Diaz of Mexico; giving as reason for my action, in the letter in which this invitation was conveyed, the fact that: "It is evident that natural resources are not limited by the boundary lines which separate nations, and that the need for conserving them upon this continent is as wide as the area upon which they exist." In response to this invitation, which included the colony of Newfoundland, the Commissioners assembled in the White House on February 18, 1909.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books