词条 | Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation |
释义 |
| agency_name = Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation | jurisdiction = Government of Virginia | patch = VA State Parks patch.jpg | headquarters = 600 East Main Street, 24th Floor, Richmond, Virginia 23219 | coordinates = {{coord|37.54003|-77.43899|type:landmark_region:US-VA|display=inline,title}} | minister1_name = Matt Strickler | minister1_pfo = Secretary of Natural Resources | chief1_name = Clyde Cristman | chief1_position = Director | website = {{URL|www.dcr.virginia.gov}} }} The Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation is a department of the government of Virginia; it oversees all Virginia state parks and Natural Area Preserves.[1] HistoryThe Virginia State Commission of Conservation and Development was created in 1926 under Governor Harry F. Byrd to consolidate and coordinate several conservation agencies: the Water Power and Development Commission, the State Geological Commission, the State Geological Survey, Office of the State Geologist, Office of the State Forester, and the Division of Parks. William E. Carson (1870-1942) was the Commission's first (unpaid) chairman and served until resigning pending a reorganization that became effective in late December 1934 and authorized a full-time state employee to head the agency. Carson consolidated what under his successor Wilbur C. Hall (1935-1939), became Shenandoah National Park, as well as coordinated with the federal Department of the Interior and Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), which created a $5 million system of state parks (in exchange for Virginia appropriations of $100,000 which some called "the biggest bargain of the New Deal").[2] Also during Carson's chairmanship, Governor John Garland Pollard in 1932 accepted several land parcels in and surrounding Richmond, Virginia, which in March 1936 became Richmond National Battlefield Park after being given to the National Park Service because during the Great Depression the Commonwealth lacked funds to develop and maintain those lands and structures.[3] Carson also created a Division of History and Archaeology within the State Commission of Conservation and Development and started a historical marker program.[4] Virginia's first six state parks were created in June 1936 despite the opposition of Virginia's Senators Carter Glass and Harry F. Byrd to many other aspects of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's administration. The first state parks were: Westmoreland State Park, Seashore State Park (which later became First Landing State Park), Fairy Stone State Park, Staunton River State Park, Douthat State Park and Hungry Mother State Park. In these and other projects, the CCC employed 107,210 in Virginia at one time or another, including 64,762 young Virginians who planted 15.2 million trees, built 986 bridges, reduced fire hazards over 152,000 acres, strung 2,128 miles of telephone line and stocked 1.3 million fish. Virginia received the fifth largest state expenditure in the country, totaling $109 million during the agency's nine-year existence.[3] The agency's name changed in 1938 to the Virginia Conservation Commission, which was led by N. Clarence Smith (1939-1942), and William A. Wright (1942-1948). In 1948 the Virginia General Assembly again reorganized state government and created the Department of Conservation and Development, which consolidated the functions of the Conservation Commission, State Port Authority and the State Planning Board. Governor William Tuck named Wright as director of the new Department of Conservation and Development. In 1985, another major governmental reorganization created the current Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation. Directors, 1926-present1926-1934 - William E. Carson (1870-1942) 1934-1939 - Wilbur C. Hall 1939-1942 - N. Clarence Smith 1942-1948 - William A. Wright ca. 1974-1978 - M.M. Sutherland 1978-1986 - Frederick W. Walker, Jr. (1924-2015) ca. 1986-ca. 1991 - B.C. "Bud" Leynes, Jr. 1991-1994 - J. Robert "Bob" Hicks, Jr. 1994-ca. 1996 - Kirby Burch 1998-2002 - David G. Brickley, Esq. 2002-2010 - Joseph H. Maroon 2010-2014 - David Johnson 2014–present - Clyde Cristman References1. ^{{cite web |url=https://www.virginia.gov/agencies/virginia-department-of-conservation-and-recreation/ |title=Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation |publisher=Commonwealth of Virginia |website=The Official Site of The Commonwealth of Virginia |accessdate=January 15, 2017}} 2. ^Ronald L. Heinemann, Depression and New Deal in Virginia (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press 1983) p. 65 3. ^1 Heinemann, p. 65 4. ^{{cite web|url=http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=lva/vi00960.xml|title=A Guide to the Department of Conservation and Development, Division of History, Records, 1927-1950 |author=|date=|website=ead.lib.virginia.edu|accessdate=19 April 2018}} External links
7 : Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation|Environmental organizations based in Virginia|State agencies of Virginia|State environmental protection agencies of the United States|Government agencies established in 1926|1926 establishments in Virginia|1926 in the environment |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。