1media/SB483C75A51921-014_thumb.jpg2023-07-21T12:23:26-05:00Kate Flynn89ab0aeaf9441ebcfe2d9d020d3b00b0ffd82873137By the late 1930s, the Forest Preserve had purchased 33,000 acres of land. The map depicts just how spread out the Forest Preserves were and how the district located preserves throughout the county. Early Forest Preserve Publications, 1910-1930. Forest Preserve District of Cook County records (MSFPDC09), FPDCC_03_05_0057_1434_001, box iii-57, folder 1434, item 1, Special Collections & University Archives, University of Illinois Chicago Library.plain2023-09-15T15:21:48-05:00Forest Preserve District of Cook County records1921Dan Harpereff3db32ed95b3efe91d381826e2c10c145cd452
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12021-01-26T16:34:20-06:00Preparations for the Future: Education and Reforestation8plain2023-10-06T13:40:53-05:00The FPDCC has expanded on its mission to preserve land for public use by sponsoring facilities for education. Since its inception, the district has furnished campgrounds in which city dwellers and outdoors groups, such as the Boy Scouts and the Girl Scouts, could explore and learn from nature.
The district also embarked on more formal ways of educating the public about nature. From the 1930s, the district has played a key role in the management of Cook County’s Brookfield Zoo. In the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s, it sponsored flower shows with the Chicago Horticultural Society, and beginning in 1972, it worked with that organization to manage the Chicago Botanic Garden in north-suburban Glencoe. Finally, its many nature programs - centered on the Crabtree Nature Center, the River Trail Nature Center, Little Red Schoolhouse Nature Center, Sand Ridge Nature Center, Camp Sagawau, and the Harold Tyrell Trailside Museum - enhanced its educational function.
In tandem with its commitment to education, the FPDCC expanded the scope of its mandate to conserve lands. Before 1961, the district could purchase only property that contained existing forests or that connected land that contained existing forests. But in 1961, the Illinois General Assembly granted the district the right to purchase “land capable of being reforested” and thereby reintroduce plant and animal life into the forests. Now the district had a much wider range of land purchasing options and could embark on large-scale plans for reforestation in the last decades of the twentieth century.