History of the Environmental Movement Timeline

  • George Perkins Marsh

    George Perkins Marsh
    George Perkins Marsh is considered a founding father of environmentalism, though he was best known for his theories on sustainability and human impact. Marsh was best known for his 1964 work, Man and Nature; later revised as The Earth as Modified by Human Action in 1874. He wrote about deforestation in the Mediterranean, and advised humanity to think carefully about disrupting natural balance, which will lead to resource scarcity. Sustainability stands today in modern ecology.
  • Henry David Thoreau

  • John Muir

  • Theodore Roosevelt

    Theodore Roosevelt
    Theodore Roosevelt's conservation history began prior to his presidency, when he was a hunter of big game. He noted how overgrazing and habitat loss impacted species. After becoming president, he created the United States Forest Service. Theodore Roosevelt also set aside 230 million acres of public land: 150 national forests, 51 federal bird reserves, 4 national game preserves, 5 national parks, and 18 national monuments (via the American Antiquities Act).
  • Gifford Pinchot

    Gifford Pinchot
    Gifford Pinchot was an early conservationist, serving as chief of the Division of Forestry, and later the Chief of the Forest Service. Pinchot worked towards conservation and management of American forests. In 1905 (when he began serving), there were 60 forest reserves spanning 56 million acres; in 1910 (when he finished serving), there were 150 national forest reserves spanning 172 million acres.
  • Alice Hamilton

    Alice Hamilton
    Alice Hamilton began her career as a doctor in a time when few women were in STEM fields. She wanted to specialize in bacteriology and/or pathology. She became deeply involved in industrial toxicology, treating occupational diseases. Hamilton studied the effects of lead poisoning on workers and encouraged the observation of workplace conditions, later inspiring others in the field of worker's safety and health.
  • Establishment of Yellowstone National Park

    Establishment of Yellowstone National Park
    Yellowstone National Park was the first national park to be established. President Grant signed a bill to set aside the 1,221,773 acres of public land. The act popularized the idea of national parks, and millions of other acres of natural habitat have been set aside and protected since. The national parks provide a way for people to learn about the environment, offer scientific opportunity, creates environmental jobs, and leaves protected untouched wilderness for native species.
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt

  • Aldo Leopold

  • Lacey Act

  • Establishment of the First National Wildlife Refuge [Pelican Island National Wildlife Refuge]

  • Founding of the United States Forest Service

    USDA Forest Service was founded.
  • Antiquities Act

  • Rachel Carson

  • Founding of the U.S. National Park Service

  • Jimmy Carter

    Jimmy Carter
    Jimmy Carter created the Department of Energy; further establishing national energy policy that would cover conservation and support new technology. Carter passed the: Soil and Water Conservation Act, the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act, made amendments on the Clean Air Act, the National Energy Act, the Antarctic Conservation Act, the Endangered American Wilderness Act, the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (which conserved 100 million acres) and the Superfund Act.
  • Edward Abbey

  • Establishment of the Civilian Conservation Corps

    Establishment of the Civilian Conservation Corps
    The CCC public relief program lasted from 1933 to 1942. Made in an attempt to lessen the Great Depression, the CCC provided people with a job often related to conservation and resource management. Environmentally, nearly 3 billion trees were planted, facilities were constructed and updated in most state parks and 800 parks nationwide, and altered forest fighting methods. This helped reforest America, providing lost habitat, and bring conservation to a wider American awareness.
  • Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation Stamp Act [Duck Stamp Act]

  • The Dust Bowl [Named after "Black Sunday" event]

    The Dust Bowl [Named after "Black Sunday" event]
    The Dust Bowl took place throughout the 1930s, with three drought waves. Native prairie grasses had been cleared for agriculture, leading to widespread wind erosion and subsequently huge 'dust' storms. The storms increased in occurrence leading up to the Black Sunday event, which is when the Dust Bowl was named. The dust smothered other life after laying, also negatively impacting soil quality, productivity, and air quality. The Dust Bowl serves as an exmaple of desertification.
  • Pittman-Robertson Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act [Pittman-Robertson Act]

    Came into effect on 1July, 1938.
  • Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act

    Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
    The Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act is a set of laws inspired by the elixir sulfanilamide disaster, in which roughly 100 patients were poisoned and killed by a compound used to dissolve the drug into liquid form. At the time, there was no requirement for premarket drug testing. The FFDCA establishes limits for additives in food, drugs, or cosmetics, and gives the FDA the power to manage products. Products must satisfy FDA regulations prior to sale, assuring consumers of product safety.
  • Al Gore

  • Wilderness Act

  • Clean Air Act

    Clean Air Act
    Unregulated industrial activity lead to a lot of environmental complications, including high levels of pollution. In places, air pollution became so bad that smog laid over cities, decreasing visibility and negatively impacting public health. The Clean Air Act controls air pollutants by enacting regulations on sources of all air pollutants. The regulations significantly improved public health, especially in respiratory cases, and decreased mortality rates.
  • Burning of the Cuyahoga River

    Burning of the Cuyahoga River
    The Cuyahoga River was one of the most polluted rivers in America, near completely devoid of life with the exception of one algae species. Sewage and industrial affluent was pumped directly into the waterway. The pollutants in the river caught fire several times: the most famed occurrence was in 1969, but the river 'burned' before this point. It cost millions of dollars in damages as boats, bridges, and even riverside buildings burned. Several acts and agencies were created partly in response.
  • National Environmental Policy Act

  • First Earth Day

  • Occupational Safety and Health Act

    Occupational Safety and Health Act
    Effective 28 April 1971, this act created the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), which worked to provide safe and healthy worker environments through regulation, education, and assistance. At the time, there was increasing public awareness and outcry about dangers in the workplace. After the OSHA's creation, worker deaths, injury rates, and injury costs reduced significantly.
  • Clean Water Act

    The CWA was first enacted in 1948 as the Federal Water Pollution Control Act. Then, it was rewritten in 1972. It was further amendded several times; examples being the CWA of 1977 and the Water Quality Act of 1987.
  • Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora [CITES]

    Entered into force on 1 July 1975.
  • OPEC Oil Embargo Begins

  • Endangered Species Act

    Endangered Species Act
    The Endangered Species Act was inspired in part by the dwindling population of large birds, including the bald eagle, as a result of DDT contamination. The act defined “endangered” and “threatened," as well as offering protection to native flora and fauna and the habitats they rely on for survival. The act allotted money for the purchase of critical habitat by the federal government. The effectiveness of the ESA is debated; few species make fully recovery, but ~98% avoided extinction thus far.
  • Love Canal Incident

    The Love Canal Incident buildup, discovery, and cleanup took place over the span of several decades. It took two more years before all families were evacuated (the date provided is when pregnant women and young children were publicly advised to evacuate, pre-government aid).
  • Three Mile Island Accident

    Three Mile Island Accident
    Three Mile Island was a partial nuclear reactor meltdown caused by mechanical and human error. The accident took place in Middletown, PA and resulted in the leak of radioactive gases and iodine into the surrounding environment. It was said that the radioactivity was not a threat to health, but the reactor remained unapproachable for some time. More so, the accident caused public opinion to tip against nuclear energy, and the industry growth slowed significantly.
  • The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act [Superfund]

    Amended on October 17,1986 by the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act.
  • Bhopal [Union Carbide] Disaster

    Occured over the night of December 2-3, 1984.
  • Chernobyl Nuclear Disaster

  • Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act [EPCRA]

  • Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer

  • Exxon Valdez Oil Spill

  • Oil Pollution Act

    Oil Pollution Act
    The Oil Pollution Act was passed the year after the Exxon Valdez marine oil spill, which spilled nearly 11 million gallons of crude oil. Three smaller oil spills followed suit, prompting the passage of the Oil Pollution Act, which: enforces removal of spilled oil, stores funds to clean up oil spills where the liable party cannot do so, defines liability for oil spills, and requires oil vessels and storage facilities to create plans. Since, $2 billion has been given by liable parties for damages.
  • Kyoto Protocol

  • Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill [BP Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill]