John Richard McGuire was born on April 20, 1916, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He received his B.S.F. degree from the University of Minnesota in 1939 and obtained a part-time Forest Service research position in Columbus, Ohio. McGuire then earned a scholarship to Yale University, where he worked at the Forest Service research facility on the campus while pursuing his M.F., awarded in 1941.[1]
Career
During World War II, McGuire served with the United States Army in the Pacific, rising to the rank of major and commanding officer of the Eighth Engineers, which was part of the first American forces to occupy Manila and Tokyo.
After the war he returned to New Haven, Connecticut, to work for the Forest Service's Northeastern Forest Experiment Station in 1945. In 1950 he was transferred to the station's Upper Darby, Pennsylvania, headquarters where he did forestry economics research while earning his M.A. in economics at the University of Pennsylvania. In 1957 he became a division director of the Pacific Southwest Forest and Range Experiment Station in Berkeley, California. Ten years later he was transferred to Washington, D.C., as deputy chief in charge of programs and legislation, and in 1971 he became associate chief.[2]
On April 30, 1972, McGuire became the tenth chief of the Forest Service.[3]
During his tenure as chief the service modified and integrated its methods of land management and weathered the attacks of some environmental critics. One of the most divisive issues he faced was clearcutting. McGuire worked to balance the needs of the lumber industry, the concerns of environmentalists and average citizens who might be shocked by the aesthetic result of the cutting.[4] McGuire made changes to strengthen the roles of the branches of state and private forestry and that of research to help implement the Forest and Rangeland Renewable Resources Planning Act (RPA) of 1974 and the National Forest Management Act of 1976. He also engaged in a successful program to involve the public in establishing additional wilderness areas within the national forests.[5]
McGuire officially retired from the Forest Service on June 30, 1979.
^"McGuire Gets Top Forest Job". Oregon Journal. March 20, 1972.
^Adam Bernstein (April 19, 2002). "John McGuire, 85; Forest Service Chief Revised Timber Rules". Washington Post.
^Roth, Dennis (1983). "McGuire, John Richard". In Davis, Richard C. (ed.). Encyclopedia of American Forest and Conservation History. Macmillan. p. 416. ISBN9780029073506.