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Showing 14,960 results for forest history ...
Cupid Steward
- Type: Person
In 1879, Steward submitted homesteadapplication number 9952at the Huntsville, Alabamalandoffice, requesting a patent for160and19/100 acres of land atthesouthwest quadrantof Section 14, Township3S, Range 6E in JacksonCounty, Alabama.
Empowering Local Youth, Restoring Sacred Lands: Puʻukoholā Heiau's Pili Grass Revival
Carbon River
West Yellowstone VIC Backcountry Office
Alaska Transfer Exhibit
Supplying the Colony Exhibit
East Gallery Stairwell
Resilience in Ecosystems
- Type: Article
Recent research from the NPS and the Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology at the University of Wisconsin – Madison, examined the impacts of wolf reintroduction, revealing insights into the persistence of species who must adapt to change within an isolated island ecosystem. THE GREENSTONE (2025) Article by Johnathan Pauli
Building a Colony Exhibit
D.H. Day Log Cabin
- Type: Place
William H. Jenkins
- Type: Person
An affluent landowner, William Jenkins provided shelter to freedom seekers heading north on the Underground Railroad on his estate north of Boston in Andover, Massachusetts.
Glendale Battlefield and National Cemetery
Malvern Hill Battlefield
Custom House
Wudzixeedi Gooch “Multiplying Wolf” house screen
Jim Beckwourth Cabin Museum
- Type: Place

Jim Beckwourth, the African-American mountain man, scion of British nobility, great medicine and warrior chief in the Crow Indian Nation, US Army scout and courier, and discoverer of Beckwourth Pass and trail, settled here on his road for 7 years. He created several things we still have: Beckwourth Pass and Trail, located by Trails West markers, this cabin, and a national best seller biography, The Life and Adventures of James P. Beckwourth, 1856.
Wisely Chosen Ground Wayside
Women's Monument Exhibit
- Type: Article

Forests in Cuyahoga Valley National Park are responding positively to nearly a decade of white-tailed deer management. Although native, at high densities white-tailed deer can negatively impact forest vegetation. A recent study using data from the park’s long-term monitoring program found a reduction of woody browse, forest regeneration, and decreases in browse on the indicator species trillium.