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“I am an Adirondacker:” Grover Cleveland and the Adirondacks

“I am an Adirondacker:” Grover Cleveland and the Adirondacks August 22, 2024
In 1884, ten years before the “Forever Wild” clause was adopted, Governor Grover Cleveland sought to prevent the Forest Preserve from being “taken up for club land.”
In 1884, ten years before the “Forever Wild” clause was adopted, Governor Grover Cleveland sought to prevent the Forest Preserve from being “taken up for club land.”

This year marks the 130th anniversary of the adoption of the state constitutional clause that declares the Adirondack Forest Preserve “forever wild,” prohibiting the sale or leasing of state-owned woodlands to lumber companies and banning the destruction of the publicly-owned timber.

The legacy of that far-sighted provision, which New Yorkers approved in the elections of 1894, has been transmitted intact by several New York governors – Franklin D. Roosevelt and Nelson Rockefeller foremost among them.

Its source in the policies of New York governors is less well-known. Who now remembers Roswell Flower, who halted the sale of the state-owned islands in Lake George in 1893?

Even less well-known is the devotion of Grover Cleveland to the Adirondacks, as both governor and, later, as president.

“I am an Adirondacker,” the former President told a gathering in New York in 1891, one year before the Adirondack Park was created. “I go there every year and shall continue to do so.”

As governor, Cleveland said, he became convinced “that the destruction of the Adirondacks would most seriously affect our river transportation, and that their preservation was also of paramount importance to the health of the people….in 1884, had measures been taken we might now own (Adirondack forest lands), but seven or eight years have passed and nothing has been accomplished. The land is being taken up for club land.”

He did recommend to the legislature a measure that would have prohibited the sale of state-owned forest lands. (That was not to happen until 1894, when the “Forever Wild” article was added to the state constitution.) Cleveland also created a park to protect Niagara Falls from commercial development; that park, he said, should be the model for the Adirondacks. And as Frank Graham notes in his “The Adirondack Park: A Political History,” the Niagara reservation was indeed “a portent of things to come in the Adirondacks.”

Cleveland’s interest in the Adirondacks grew out of his own experience. He began making hunting and fishing trips to the region in the 1880s, staying at Paul Smith’s and at the Saranac Inn.

A trip made in 1885, the first year of his presidency, was perhaps typical. Illustrated by Henry Watson, a story about the trip appeared in Frank Leslie’s Weekly. It describes both the difficulties of reaching the Adirondacks – by train to Plattsburgh and then Ausable Forks, and from Ausable a 46-mile stagecoach trip taking an entire day.

And although the Adirondacks appears not much more accessible than it was twenty years earlier, when W. H. Murray’s “Adventures in the Wilderness” brought the first wave of tourists to the region, it now provides luxurious accommodations:

“Here in one of the inmost valleys of the Adirondacks, appears, as if by enchantment, a fully-equipped and fashionable summer hotel, quite Saratoga-like with its gay parlors and verandas thronged with promenaders in the correct toilets of town. Only the supper menu, on which jerked beef, beefsteak, hot biscuits and huckleberries figured most prominently, suggested the mountains. Evidently there is more than one way of ‘camping out in the Adirondacks,’ and the President has chosen the most comfortable for his short period of rest and recreation.”

It has been said that of all American presidents, Cleveland was the best sportsman – better even than Teddy Roosevelt.

In areas like foreign policy and the use of presidential power to defend the interests of the average American, historians rank Roosevelt somewhat higher than Cleveland.

Nevertheless, it is hard not to admire a president who refused to give up his Memorial Day fishing trips, despite charges in the press that he was unpatriotic, or one who, rather than publishing self-serving accounts of his political achievements, wrote a memoir of fishing and hunting instead. It is especially hard not to admire a president who claimed with pride, “I am an Adirondacker.”

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