Johnson, Ilia Fehrer was also a leading figure on the Committee to Preserve Assateague Island. The Committee fought to eliminate that provision, and the island’s pristine landscape today is a testament to its success and the crucible for ACT’s ongoing commitment to protecting our coastal environment. This is wrong,” he recalls his mother declaring. He remembers her reaction on learning of plans to “improve” the pristine barrier island with a thirty-mile highway, a 14,000-car parking lot, motels, and fast-food restaurants. Johnson began her activism at the behest of her young son, Reid, after they took a trip to Assateague together in the 1960s. In fact, her most recent position had been managing the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra where she was the first woman in the country to serve in such a role. The catalyst for the creation of this all-volunteer, grassroots group was the introduction of legislation that established Assateague Island National Seashore, including a provision that would have allowed a significant portion of the island to be developed as a resort, destroying the unspoiled beauty of the island.Īs the founding chairperson of the Committee, Judith Johnson began her campaign with little direct experience in politics or science. New York: Funk and Wagnalls, 1974.Assateague Coastal Trust (ACT) was first established as The Committee to Preserve Assateague Island. The National Historic Preservation Act and the National Park Service: A History. The Beaches Are Moving: The Drowning of America's Shoreline. Public recognition and subsequent congressional action have saved these few areas that are important as fish and shellfish spawning and nursery areas, bird and sea turtle nesting grounds, and refuges for threatened vegetation and wildlife. The National Historic Preservation Act (passed in 1966), the Coastal Zone Management Act (1972), and the National Seashore Act (1976) have been written to ensure that not all natural coastal areas fall to development. The other National Seashores are Padre Island, in Texas Cape Lookout, in North Carolina and the newest national seashore, Florida's Cape Canaveral. Cumberland Island, Georgia, is the most "natural" of the ten national sea shores and is completely undeveloped with the only access being a public ferry from the mainland. It also includes an historic Spanish fort. Gulf Islands is a non-continuous collection of estuarine, barrier island, and marsh habitats in Mississippi and Florida. In the 1970s, the final three national seashores were authorized. By 1965, about 31 mi (50 km) of shoreline were purchased and became part of the National Seashore System. Assateague Island, on the eastern shore of Maryland and Virginia, was deemed too developed to become a protected area but a nor'easter storm in March 1962 destroyed or seriously damaged nearly all of the development. The " Cape Cod Formula" is the model for current regulation and purchase of private improved lands by the Park Service.įive more sites were authorized between 19, including Fire Island on Long Island, New York, and Point Reyes National Seashore, the only national seashore on the west coast. Protecting beach and dune areas of biological and geologically significance, this site was acquired with legislation that set the standard for future Park Service acquisitions. In 1961, Cape Cod National Seashore in Massachusetts was the second area to be so designated. Acquiring the land, however, remained a problem until after World War II, when the Mellon Foundation matched state contributions and purchased the first of what is now over 100 mi (160 km) of beaches, dunes, marsh, and maritime forest. The first of these to be authorized was Cape Hatteras National Seashore, a narrow strip of barrier island on the North Carolina outer banks. The need to preserve coastal areas in their natural states was recognized as long ago as 1934, when the Park Service surveyed the Gulf and Atlantic coasts and identified 12 areas deserving of federal protection. A third objective is to combat coastal erosion, as beaches and dunes are important as buffers to coastal storms. In fact, until recently it was stipulated that public access must be provided to these areas. These areas are also lightly developed for recreational purposes, including roads, administrative buildings, and some commercial businesses. Protection of the sensitive natural habitats is only one of the objectives of the National Seashores System that the Park Service has established. Over 435 miles (700 km) of Atlantic, Gulf, and Pacific coastline, including over 592,800 acres (240,000 hectares) of beaches, dunes, sea cliffs, maritime forests, fresh ponds, marshes, and estuaries comprise the National Seashore System. Department of the Interior, manages ten tracts of coastal land known as national seashores. The National Park Service, under the U.S.
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