Defending Giants: The Redwood Wars and The Transformation of American Environmental Politics
Defending Giants: The Redwood Wars and The Transformation of American Environmental Politics
Defending Giants: The Redwood Wars and The Transformation of American Environmental Politics
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Weyerhaeuser Environmental Books explore human relationships with natural environments in all their variety and complexity.
They seek to cast new light on the ways that natural systems affect
human communities, the ways that people affect the environments of
which they are a part, and the ways that different cultural conceptions
of nature profoundly shape our sense of the world around us. A complete list of the books in the series appears at the end of this book.
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DEFENDING
GIANTS
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The paper used in this publication is acid-free and meets the minimum
requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences
Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.481984.
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CONTENTS
Deep Roots27
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Introduction3
Three Radicalization119
Four
Bursting Out171
Five
The Transformation213
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Epilogue253
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Notes269
Selected Bibliography315
Index323
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FOREWORD
of Environmental Activism
Paul S. Sutter
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Tree hugger is a curious epithet. The phrase has its origins in Indias
Chipko movement of the 1970s, when rural villagersmany of them
womenin the Himalayan region of Uttar Pradesh launched a series
of nonviolent protests against commercial timber harvesting. Some of
them did so by hugging trees to prevent their destruction, acts that gave
the movement its name (chipko means embrace in Hindi). Forests were
critical to these villagers as sources of food, fuel, and fodder, and so they
opposed commercial forest destruction as a major threat to their livelihoods. From Uttar Pradesh, the Chipko movement spread across India
over the following decades, achieving important political successes and
capturing the imagination of the global environmental community. In
the context of Chipko, tree huggers were rural peoples working to protect their local economies of forest use from the increasingly globalized
forces of commercial timber exploitation.
In the North American context, however, tree hugger has taken on
a different set of meanings. Over the last several decades, those who
opposed limits on timber harvesting, or environmental regulations
of any sort, have deployed the moniker to suggest that environmental
protesters care more about trees than about people or the vitality of
their local economies. While there are certainly some who embrace the
identity, tree hugger largely has become a term of derision used to portray
environmentalists as privileged and misguided nature lovers, sentimental preservationists who are out of touch with the economic struggles
of those who work in rural extractive economies. Whereas tree huggers
vii
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viii|Foreword
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1960s and early 1970s, environmental politics settled into an institutional groove with big national membership organizations functioning
as an environmental lobby. Because of these foundational assumptions,
environmental historians have paid surprisingly scant attention to
American environmentalism as a social movement, and to the ways in
which environmental politics have evolved since the 1970s as a result of
continued movement activism. In our neglect, we have largely let stand
the logic that dismisses environmental activists as mere tree huggers.
In Defending Giants, his compelling new history of Californias
Redwood Wars, Darren Speece insists that this neglect has been a
mistake. The Redwood Warsbattles over the last remaining stands
of old-growth redwood forestroiled Californias North Coast during the last several decades of the twentieth century. They were, as
Speece convincingly argues, one of the longest, most violent, and
most intractable environmental conflicts in American history. These
battlesand particularly efforts to save a grove known as the Headwaters Forestwere marked by dramatic direct action protests by activists who opposed the multinational Maxxam Corporations efforts to
clear-cut some of the few remaining ancient redwood groves. And,
yes, activists employed tree-hugging, tree-sitting, and other confrontational tactics to protect these trees and to raise national awareness and
support for redwoods preservationthough these were only the most
visible features of a sophisticated political strategy that also included
lawsuits, legislative lobbying, the full use of public comment provisions, and public relations. One of Speeces signal achievements in
Defending Giants is to provide us with a truly three-dimensional portrait of this movement and the activists who sustained it, a portrait
that is far more nuanced than our caricatures and reigning historiographical assumptions have allowed. In the process, Speece shows how
fierce battles in a remote region of the American West transformed
American environmental politics.
The environmental activists at the center of Speeces story, men and
women, came from varied backgrounds, but few fit the mold of middleand upper-class metropolitan consumers. Many were locals to one
degree or another, rural people by birth or choice who valued the North
Coast as a place to live and work, a retreat from the very consumer
culture that had engulfed postwar America. Rather than embodying
Foreword |ix
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x|Foreword
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had emerged in the 1970s simply could not handle the intractable legal
and local conflicts that emerged on the North Coast, conflicts marked
not only by direct action protest but also by lawsuits and injunctions.
As a result, environmental politics as usual on the North Coast had
resulted in a logjam by the 1990s.
From this clogged regulatory channel there emerged a new course
for American environmental politics in which the executive branch
gained expanded authority to broker compromise solutions among
stakeholders. Speece aptly refers to this as an administrative turn in
environmental politics, and it was pioneered in the Headwaters Forest
deal that finally emerged in the 1990s. That deal preserved a significant
portion of the Headwaters Forest from timber cutting, though much
less than activists had wanted. As importantly, it also included the first
multispecies Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP) in the nations history
for the entirety of the forest, a plan brokered by the executive branch to
break the stalemate in the courts, and in the woods, that had resulted
from the strict provisions of the Endangered Species Act. While neither side was entirely happy with the result, the HCP did represent a
victory of sorts for North Coast activists. It not only preserved and put
under public ownership a portion of an ancient redwood forest threatened with industrial clear-cutting, but also undid Californias corporatist forestry regime and held the timber industry accountable for how
it treated its working lands. While the particulars of the Headwaters
deal left many activists feeling deflated, the deal nonetheless embodied their desire to balance the preservation of old-growth redwoods
with a sustainable timber economy for the North Coast. More than
that, though, it spoke to the power these activists had to provoke a
presidential intervention and a new model for mediating environmental disputes. Ultimately, Speece suggests, a small group of determined
people working in a remote corner of the country effected a sea change
in national environmental politics.
Defending Giants is a complicated story elegantly told, one full of fascinating characters with nuanced political positions that sometimes got
lost in the heat of battle. More than that, it is a book that demonstrates
how our easy resort to caricature has obscured the substance of what happened behind the North Coasts Redwood Curtain in the late twentieth
century. Darren Speece has given us a history of environmental activism
xii|Foreword
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Foreword |xiii
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
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This book exists because groups of Americans have, over the past 150
years, worked and fought to ensure that forests of ancient redwoods
continue to inhabit this planet. I fell in love with these trees and forests
more than twenty years ago, and they might not still exist were it not
for the efforts of fellow travelers in California and across the nation.
Citizens, timber executives, and government officials of all stripes were
critical in the development of Redwood Countrysometimes collaboratively, many times confrontationally. This book traverses the contours
of those relationships, and the various relationships between human
communities and the redwood forest. Much of this book revolves
around the stories of small groups of rural Americans grappling with
the forces of industrialization. My hope is that they, and others, find
inspiration in the example offered by the residents of the North Coast
as they, against great odds, exerted incredible influence over the future
of the land, the economy, and the culture. Activists, timber workers,
and local officials pushed on the impersonal forces of globalization and
made them budge. It was a feat worthy of notice.
The stories in this book would not have been possible without the
cooperation and assistance of the North Coast. I was awestruck by the
generosity of many of the individuals I was fortunate enough to write
about in this book. Kathy Bailey, in particular, deserves special recognition. She opened her home, memory, and office to me on countless occasions. Her unprocessed personal papers documenting her work related
to North Coast forestry and redwoods issues were invaluable, the most
organized files Ive encountered off a dirt road back in the mountains.
Scott Greacen and the staff at the Environmental Protection Information Center literally handed me the keys to their storage unit, and my
work would not have been possible without their unprocessed archives,
xv
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Linda Speece, supported and helped fund my venture into the history
of conflicts over logging the redwoods. By moving to a wooded lot on
Minnehaha Creek in 1980, they afforded me the opportunity to tramp
about in the woods and along the creek for hours every day. From that
wellspring grew my passion for forests and natural history. Those early
memories exploring the woods reemerge every time my wife, Tiernan,
and I take our young boys, Porter and Alexander, to hike along the
creeks in Rock Creek Park in Washington, DC. We took Porter to the
North Coast when he was not quite a year old, and I am grateful to
have been able to share some of my fieldwork with him. Alexander will
visit the redwoods during the summer of 2016 thanks to a generous
Faculty Travel Grant from Sidwell Friends School! I hope Porter and
Alexander develop the same affection for imbibing the smells, sights,
and sounds of the forest that has motivated me since those early years
as a boy in Minnesota. Finally, I cannot appropriately express my gratitude to Tiernan, who sacrificed a great deal to support my fascination
with understanding the Headwaters Forest conflict. She has endured
my distraction, late nights, research trips to California, and boxes upon
boxes of documents arriving at our house. She also read countless versions of this book over the years, and I appreciate her deft eye for clunky
language. I dedicate this book to Tiernan. Thank you!
xviii|Acknowledgments
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CDF
CEQA
CESA
EPA
EPIC
ESA
FPA
HFCC
HLAP
HCP
NEPA
NMFS
SYP
THP
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ABBREVIATIONS
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Redwood
National Park
LO S T COAS
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Headwaters
Forest Reserve
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OCEAN
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Map 1. The historical range of the redwood forest hugged the Pacific Coast from
south of San Francisco to just north of the Oregon border. Big Basin Redwoods
State Park was the first redwood park, Redwood National Park is the largest, and
the Headwaters Forest Reserve is the most recent. Map by Bill Nelson, 2016.
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confirming proo
Bill Nelson 3/21
Redwood
National Park
Prairie Creek
Redwoods SP
PA C I F I C
OCEAN
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HUMBOLDT
101
299
Arcata
Headwaters Eureka
Forest Reserve
Freshwater Creek
Salmon Creek
Lawrence Creek
Blanton Creek
Carlotta
Scotia
Yager Creek
Fortuna
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Stafford
Humboldt Redwoods SP
Bull Creek
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King Range O A
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National
Conservation
Shelter
Cove
Area
Whales Gulch
Garberville
Whitehorn
Sinkyone Wilderness SP
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Eel
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MENDOCINO
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Albion
Albion River
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30
40
Ukiah
Philo
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60 km
Cloverdale
Map 2. The North Coast is traversed by numerous fault lines and mountains.
The only north-south highway through Mendocino and Humboldt counties
is Highway 101. Most of the Redwood Wars were fought in these two counties.
Map by Bill Nelson, 2016.
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Defending Giants
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INTRODUCTION
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4|Introduction
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The injuries to Bari and Cherney, along with the criminal investigation and bad press that followed, could have sunk the Redwood Summer campaign, but instead the bombing contributed to the protraction
of the Redwood Wars. Environmentalists around the nation were
stunned by the violence, and some larger national organizations began
to assist the North Coast activists in their efforts to protect Headwaters
Forest. Emboldened, activists expanded their campaign to reform logging practices, locking into a decade-long cycle of litigation and protest
with timber companies, the State of California, and the federal government. By the end of the first decade of the twenty-first century, North
Coast activists had secured the protection of nearly all the remaining
privately owned redwood groves containing ancient trees, transformed
Californias forestry regulations, and forced the federal government
to seriously grapple with its responsibility to protect endangered species located on private property. Additionally, a federal jury in 2002
awarded Cherney and the estate of Judi Bari, who had died of cancer
in 1997, a multimillion-dollar settlement after evidence emerged linking the FBI and North Coast timber companies to the bombing and
subsequent framing of the activists.2
The bombing was one of the better-known events of the Redwood
Wars, among the longest, most violent, most intractable environmental conflicts in American history, lasting from the 1970s until the first
decade of the twenty-first century. The drama of the bombing underscored the uncertainties produced by the Redwood Warsuncertainties about the future of the local logging industry, giant redwood trees,
the redwood ecosystem, and the culture of the North Coast. In the
midst of those uncertainties, tempers flared. Corporate executives, law
enforcement officers, loggers, and environmental activists each had a
major stake in this contest. Some of these hostilities have been documented in detail elsewhere, but the bombing raises serious questions
about how and why peaceful environmental protest, so widespread and
popular during the 1970s, became the locus of widespread physical and
political violence by the 1990s.3 Scholars have yet to fully grapple with
the causes of the Redwood Wars, their complex dynamics, and their
legacy for American environmental politics in the twenty-first century.
The Redwood Wars had several important impacts. First, they
severely eroded corporate power in California and across the nation.
Introduction |5
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Litigation was the activists most effective weapon in the fight to limit
the prerogatives of private landowners. Beginning in the late 1960s, a
series of citizen lawsuits in California ended the states official policy of
allowing the timber industry to self-regulate and to promote development as its top priority. The resulting environmental protection laws
included provisions for public participation in agency decisions about
land management, and activists on the North Coast took advantage of
those provisions to develop an aggressive legal strategy to reform logging practices across the state. By the 1990s, lawsuits had eroded the
traditional alliance between the California Board of Forestry and the
timber industry, forcing the agency to enact rules protecting giant redwoods and associated endangered species. The activists litigation strategy then landed them in federal court, and as had happened in the state
courts, federal justices, using the provisions of the Endangered Species
Act, placed wide-ranging restrictions on private landowners. The activists victories in court prompted the Pacific Lumber Company to file
lawsuits against the State of California and the United States, alleging
that the court rulings had deprived them of their property without just
compensation, a violation of the Fifth Amendment. To avoid a lengthy
and risky court case, President Bill Clinton intervened and authorized
an unprecedented land deal: the public purchased some of the redwood
forest from Pacific Lumber, and in return, the company agreed to an
extensive set of long-term land management plans approved by state
and federal agencies. Thus the company received millions of dollars
in cash but also agreed to further restrictions on its private property
prerogatives. So began a growing national regulatory trend marked by
the expansion of executive branch authority into environmental policy.
The activists legal strategy was part of a broader political strategy
that employed legislative reform efforts and direct action in addition to
citizen lawsuits. The roadblocks and tree-sits temporarily prevented the
logging of particular groves of ancient redwoods, while the court cases
permanently prevented logging in many of those selected stands of
trees. The activists used rallies and demonstrations to draw attention to
their efforts, and they used the public support garnered by such activism
to support legislation that would apply the court rulings more broadly
to logging practices across the state. The legislative proposals would
have banned clear-cuts, prevented the logging of ancient redwoods, and
6|Introduction
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temperate rain forest. The activists named Pacific Lumbers most important remnant of ancient redwoods Headwaters Forest and developed
a campaign to prevent Pacific Lumber from logging the area. After a
decade of court battles and direct actions, President Clinton signed the
1996 agreement with Pacific Lumber for federal acquisition of approximately seven thousand acres of Headwaters Forest. The activists were
both relieved and disappointed: they had wanted to protect nearly sixty
thousand acres to ensure the integrity of the ancient forest ecosystem,
but seven thousand acres was better than nothing. As I learned more
about the Redwood Wars, I was particularly interested in how and why
the battle for Headwaters Forest ended the way it had.4
My interest in unraveling the Headwaters Forest conflict grew
out of my own experiences on the North Coast. From 1995 to 1997, I
attended Humboldt State University as a geology student, witnessing
the Redwood Wars during their most prominent years in the national
spotlight. I attended the two largest anti-logging rallies in American
history, passed through the gauntlet of logging families lining the road
to the rally, and became immersed in the life of a small rural college
town behind the Redwood Curtain, where, as journalist David Harris described it to me, there seemed to be only two types of residents:
Those who looked like they just got out of the Marines, and those who
looked like they just got out of a Grateful Dead concert.5 I worked at a
bar in Arcata called the Alibi, a place frequented by both locals and
college students. I observed the vast cultural differences between the
two groups. Because I worked at the Alibi, I was able to straddle both
worlds to a degree, but my sympathies were clearly with the radical environmentalists and my fellow college students. Environmental issues
had motivated me to transfer from Southern Methodist University to
Humboldt State. I was not interested in becoming a Texas oil company
geologist: I wanted to do US Geological Survey research, I thought. I
wanted to understand the history of the earth and humanity. I wanted
to protect ancient forests from logging. I wanted to protect the Amazon
rain forest from development. After graduation, I worked with nonprofit environmental groups on campaigns to prevent pollution, clean
up toxic waste sites, and stop logging and development in roadless areas
on public land. Later, as a graduate student, when I had the opportunity
to study the conflict that had haunted me for nearly a decade, I dove
10|Introduction
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12|Introduction
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first state park. But logging and clear-cutting increased during and
after World War I, and as a result, wealthy patrons and local activists
worked hard during the interwar years to establish more such parks,
including Humboldt Redwoods State Park. After World War II, logging and clear-cutting increased yet again, further reducing the size
and number of stands of massive trees. In response, the patrons and
activists continued to create more redwood state parks. But the politics
of redwood preservation was also changing. Large multinational corporations were displacing smaller local timber companies and imposing
industrial logging practices. At the same time, ecologists had begun to
argue that biodiversity was integral to healthy ecosystems and to sustaining life on earth. Influenced by those new ecological commitments,
national environmental groups sought to protect entire watersheds in
Redwood Country. One major result was the creation of Redwood
National Park in 1968, a demonstration of the power of combining the
differing approaches of older and newer redwood activist organizations.
This recurring conflict escalated into the Redwood Wars in the 1970s,
as the oldest and largest redwoods became scarcer and their value to
all members of North Coast society increased exponentially. Activists
continued to work to create and expand redwood parks, but they also
began to demand wholesale changes to logging practices to protect redwood forests on private property. The Redwood Wars would determine
the fate of the last stands of ancient redwoods: whether they would be
turned into quick profits for multinational corporations and short-term
wages for workers or remain for humans to enjoy for the long run, for
fauna to occupy, and for future ancient redwoods to sprout beneath.
The battle over Headwaters Forest has garnered a lot of attention,
but it was not a singular event. On the contrary, it was a part of a
half-century-long effort by California environmental activists to break
down the corporatist regime created in the nineteenth century. I had
not initially appreciated the larger battle, which was obscured by the
fireworks of the Redwood Wars. The corporatist theory of industrial
economics posits that those individuals who best know an industry
can manage and regulate it most efficiently. In practice, that meant
placing the timber industry in charge of regulating timber operations in an attempt to ensure smooth and ever-increasing production
levels into the future. The State of California facilitated industry
14|Introduction
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18|Introduction
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habits of industrial America. That narrative of postwar environmentalism was based on the development of middle-class affluence and resulting environmental values based on consumptionof recreation and
leisure, and clean air and water. Just as the New Deal made the government responsible for protecting Americans from the worst economic
effects of industrial capitalism, the modern environmental protection
regime made the government responsible for protecting Americans
from the deleterious environmental effects of industrial capitalism.10
This historical literature, with its focus on how postwar metropolitan Americans valued the environment, has overestimated the shift
away from resource conservation and toward modern ecological and
broadly consumerist environmental values. On the North Coast at least,
Pinchotian conservation was a powerful source of ideas throughout the
twentieth century, and it was easily integrated with modern ecological
theories and Muirian preservation. Gifford Pinchot, the nations first
national forester and leader of the early twentieth-century conservation
movement, believed in efficient resource use based on scientific forestry
as a necessary path to the improvement of human society by preventing
resource scarcity and resulting social conflict. Additionally, Pinchot
believed the government, as promoter of the public good, needed to
safeguard the nations resources from profit-focused corporations. John
Muir, founder of the Sierra Club, was also skeptical of businesss ability
to protect natural resources, but Muir was interested less in protecting
the economic value of resources and more in protecting the sublime
qualities of the grandest landscapes in America. He viewed wild places
as sources of spiritual renewal that enabled individuals to fight off the
ills of industrial society. Those two worldviews were never as mutually
exclusive as was once described. Muir and Pinchot both viewed landscapes in terms of their benefits to humanity, but they simply prioritized
different sets of benefits. Likewise, the North Coast activists believed
they could create a landscape that utilized conservation methodology to
protect economic, spiritual, aesthetic, and ecological resources and traditions. While North Coast activists were avid preservationists when it
came to protecting the few remaining ancient forests, they also thought
deeply about the regions need for a sustainable and equitable timber
economy. To see them merely as tree huggers, then, is to miss an important part of the story.11
Introduction |19
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20|Introduction
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wildlands preservation and human land use. While the style and tactics
of the new insurgents were used on the North Coast and many people
affiliated themselves with Earth First!, the Redwood Wars were fought
over how to best integrate human society with nonhuman communities, not how to separate humanity from the wild. Nearly every local
participant wanted humans to actively manage the landscape so that
giant redwoods, Douglas firs, timber workers, farmers, marbled murrelets, northern spotted owls, Pacific giant salamanders, and the other
inhabitants of the North Coast could cohabitate in perpetuity. Additionally, while the North Coast activists leaned heavily on direct action
and civil disobedience, they also utilized many mainstream political
tools, including lawsuits, lobbying, and public relations.13
The people on the North Coast whom I encountered, both during
my time living there and in my subsequent research, were certainly
committed to clean air and water, healthy and diverse forests, and
opportunities to commune with nature in wild places. But they were
also highly critical of American consumer culture, the culture that had
supposedly done so much to shape modern environmental sensibilities, and of the global corporate capitalism that fed such consumerism.
They were skeptical of the federal government but sympathetic to timber workers, millers, and farmers. The activists on the North Coast
during the Redwood Wars were more anti-corporate than they were
strictly preservationist. Yes, they were back-to-the-landers, counterculture refugees, and homesteaders, and as such, they believed that
if corporate, industrial logging operations could be forced out of the
North Coast, the localsfarmers, loggers, homesteaders, shopkeepers,
activistswould make decisions promoting the economic, ecological,
and social sustainability of the region. They decided they needed to
stop logging projects on what they determined were the most sensitive
landscapes while they worked to reform timber harvesting practices
that would apply to all California lands. The former efforts, designed
to ensure that ample old-growth habitat would remain to be integrated
into the landscape-wide management plans of the future, have garnered
the most attention from the media and subsequent historians. But the
traditional narrative that views American environmental politics from
thirty thousand feet above Washington, DC, does not always hold
when events are viewed closer to the ground.14
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landscape composed of a variety of protected habitats and work environments, and block harvesting of the last old-growth redwoods. The
leaders of the timber industry wanted to maximize new wood growth
and efficiently harvest trees, based on an eighteenth- and nineteenthcentury European model of forestry that emphasized sustained yields
and rotational harvests to maximize annual timber yields and growth,
an approach that treated forests as crops. The companies believed that
enough ancient redwoods were already protected by 1980 to provide
adequate old-growth habitat, and that species previously found in oldgrowth forests would adapt to second-growth habitat. Lumber workers
and the State of California were caught in the middle, with both groups
recruited as allies by the two protagonists with uneven results. The
Redwood Wars thus resemble other historical battles pitting industrialists against local residents and workers over the trajectory and consequences of industrial capitalism.15
Our understanding of the broad, deep forces behind the challenges
to industrial resource extraction is incomplete because the spotted
owl conflicts of the 1980s and 1990s have come to dominate analysis of
forest and endangered species politics. Those conflicts, along with the
fights over dams and wilderness, largely centered on national institutions and public lands. Such studies have shed light on the postwar
politicization of science and the importance of having science
on ones side. The result was not policy clarity but confusion, with
politics determining final decisions. Less well known are the battles
and debates over private land management, including those involved
in the Redwood Wars. Indeed, one of the most important features of
the Redwood Wars was that they were almost entirely fought over
the fate of private lands. This book views private property, and the
Headwaters Forest conflict in particular, as central to the transformation of modern American environmental politics whereby the executive branch expanded its power to directly regulate private land use,
bypassing Congress and the courts. And the people who fought in the
wars underscore the diversity and complexity of the modern environmental movement and the ways local communities helped erect a new
modern environmental protection regime.16
Defending Giants traces the roots of the Redwood Wars back to the
development of Redwood Country immediately after the gold rush and
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follows the three main institutions in the Redwood Wars through the
twentieth century. The California Board of Forestry, the Pacific Lumber Company, and the redwood preservation movement all originated
in the second half of the nineteenth century, and they all were critical
players in the conflicts surrounding the Redwood Wars. In fact, the
Redwood Wars enacted a competition among the three entities over
whose prerogatives would rule Redwood Country. Before World War
II, the timber industry had more or less free rein behind the Redwood
Curtain. Groups periodically demanded that some places be protected
from logging, and to accomplish their goals they engaged the landowner
and the State of California in real estate negotiations to create public
parks. That tradition dominated until after World War II, when citizens began not only increasing their demands for park creation but also
insisting that the timber industry change its logging practices to protect
the landscape and forest ecology more broadly. The publics intrusions
on the management of private property, rooted in claims that such private lands held public goods, were met with resistance from the timber
companies and the Board of Forestry. But they found a sympathetic ear
in the State Assembly. During the late twentieth century, conflicts over
logging the redwoods grew more complicated as the California legislature and courts increasingly limited the prerogatives of private property
owners at the behest of citizen activists. In turn, the timber companies
and their allies on the Board of Forestry stiffly resisted the new regime.
The confrontations between activists and companies grew more hostile
and more frequent, both in the courtroom and in the forest. Eventually
convinced by the courts, the Board of Forestry was forced to abandon
its allies in the timber industry, but timber companies persisted in their
opposition to the forestry reforms. Activists responded by pressing
their case in federal court instead of the California court system. The
seemingly intractable battles were resolved at the federal level by the
actions of the Clinton administration, but hardly anyone on the North
Coast was satisfied with the compromise.
The Redwood Wars were complicated, and so is their legacy. They
divided an already combustible North Coast; they helped push endangered species protection out of the legislative arena; they launched a
series of legal challenges to private property takings; they protected
more than three thousand acres of redwood forest populated by ancient
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trees; they allowed for the harvest of tens of thousands of acres of redwood forest that activists deemed critical to present and future oldgrowth habitat; and ultimately they led to the removal of Pacific Lumber
from the North Coast. The Redwood Wars did not change the social
structure of the North Coast, but they did begin to break down Californias corporatist regulatory regime. All the parties had believed they
were fighting for the best interest of the forest and the community, but
their visions grew incompatible. In the end, it was a war that neither
side won.
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