President Roosevelt Establishes Channel Islands National Monument
β³ Part of Series
π April 26, 1938
πChannel Islands, California
Tags:BiodiversityCaliforniaCultural HeritageMonument CreationNational Park ServicePacific Region
Inclusion Criteria:
Presidential Order
At a Glance
π°2 Sources
π₯4 People
Key individuals:
Theodore Cockerell, Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Alan Cranston
Description
President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Proclamation 2281 on April 26, 1938, designating Anacapa and Santa Barbara Islands as Channel Islands National Monument under authority granted by the Antiquities Act. The proclamation identified the islands' scientific significance, citing the presence of Pleistocene elephant fossils, ancient tree remains, volcanic formations, and ongoing coastal erosion processes as warranting federal preservation. Management responsibility was assigned to the superintendent of Sequoia National Park.
Advocacy for federal protection began in 1932 when the Bureau of Lighthouses proposed transferring the islands to the National Park Service. Biologist Theodore D. A. Cockerell of the University of Colorado provided critical scientific documentation between 1937 and 1938, characterizing the islands as possessing significance comparable to the Galapagos archipelago due to their endemic species and isolated ecosystems. His publications and specimen collections helped persuade the Park Service to accept the land transfer and pursue monument status.
The initial designation encompassed only the two smallest islands in the eight-island Channel Islands chain. San Miguel, Santa Cruz, and Santa Rosa Islands remained excluded from federal protection due to private ownership and U.S. Navy operational control. This limitation would shape subsequent expansion efforts over the following four decades, culminating in the establishment of Channel Islands National Park in 1980.
Provided critical scientific documentation and publications between 1937 and 1938 that helped persuade the National Park Service to pursue monument status.
Participant1
βΆ
π€
Alan Cranston
primary
Participant
Senator
at U.S. Senate (California)
Introduced a bill in the Senate in 1977 and helped pass the 1980 legislation creating Channel Islands National Park.
Signatory2
βΆ
π€
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
primary
Signatory
President of the United States
at U.S. Government
Signed Proclamation 2281 on April 26, 1938, designating Anacapa and Santa Barbara Islands as Channel Islands National Monument.
π€
Harry S. Truman
primary
Signatory
President of the United States
at U.S. Government
Signed Proclamation No. 2825 on February 9, 1949, which added 17,635 acres to the monument, extending its boundaries one nautical mile offshore.
This event is definitively a presidential proclamation (Proclamation 2281) issued by Franklin D. Roosevelt under authority of the Antiquities Act of 1906. Presidential proclamations are executive orders used to create national monuments. This is the most specific and accurate criterion for this type of federal action.
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National Parks Conservation Record (Demonstration Chronicle)
President Roosevelt Establishes Channel Islands National Monument
27
https://factkeeper.org/publicevents/27
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