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Carl A Schenck

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Citizenship
  
Germany

Name
  
Carl Schenck

Nationality
  
German

Died
  
May 17, 1955, Germany


Fields
  
Forestry

Alma mater
  
University of Giessen

Carl A. Schenck

Residence
  
Asheville, North Carolina; Hessen

Known for
  
Forester, George W. Vanderbilt's Biltmore Estate 1895-1909; Founder, Biltmore Forest School

Books
  
The Birth of Forestry in America: Bilt Forest School, 1898-1913

Education
  
University of Giessen, University of Tubingen

Institutions
  
Biltmore Forest School

Organizations founded
  
Bilt Forest School

Carl Alwyn Schenck (March 25, 1868 – May 17, 1955) was a pioneering forestry educator in North America, known for his contributions as the forester for George W. Vanderbilt's Biltmore Estate, and the founder of the Biltmore Forest School, the first practical forestry school in the United States, in 1898, near Brevard, NC.

Contents

Carl A. Schenck httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbb

Education and early life

Carl A. Schenck Americas First Forest Carl Schenck and the Asheville Experiment

Schenck was born in 1868 in the town of Darmstadt, Germany. From his youth he looked to forestry as a career, graduating from the Institute of Technology in Darmstadt at age 18. Two years later he enrolled for graduate study at the forest school of the University of Giessen. At Giessen he studied for a time under visiting professor Sir Dietrich Brandis, an influential German-born forester who had played a large part in introducing forestry into the British Empire, working in the forests of India and various other places. Brandis also had a great interest in forestry work in the United States. Schenck completed his Ph.D. degree at the beginning of 1895, and was at that time recommended by Brandis for a job in the United States working for George W. Vanderbilt. Schenck decided to accept the offer from Vanderbilt and sailed to America, arriving in New York City on April 5, 1895.

Biltmore

Carl A. Schenck Schenck Carl Alwin NCpedia

George W. Vanderbilt's Biltmore Estate near Asheville, North Carolina, included some 120,000 acres (490 km2) of mountain land. With these extensive forest land holdings, Vanderbilt had decided during the early 1890s that he wanted his forests managed using the best scientific principles of forestry. At this time there were only two trained foresters in the U.S.: American Gifford Pinchot and German Bernard Fernow. When Schenck arrived in America at Vanderbilt's request, he became the third.

Carl A. Schenck Local documentary traces origins of US forestry in WNC screens

Schenck took over the position of Biltmore Estate forester, and immediately got to work managing the vast land holdings. Schenck worked on various forest plantations, setting up tree nurseries, seed extraction and regeneration efforts, logging areas and sawmills, as well as splash dams and fish hatcheries in the rivers. Schenck used new scientific management and practical forestry techniques which had never before been applied to American forests.

Carl A. Schenck NCSU Libraries Rare and Unique Digital Collections Search Results

In 1898, with the permission of George Vanderbilt, Schenck founded the Biltmore Forest School, the first forestry school in the United States. The school opened on the Biltmore Estate grounds on September 1, 1898, one month before Fernow's opening of the New York State College of Forestry at Cornell University. The Biltmore Forest School offered a one-year course of study, and the curriculum focused on providing traditional classroom lectures in silvicultural theory supplemented with extensive hands-on, practical forest management field training. The school operated successfully on the Biltmore grounds from 1898 to 1909, turning out many of the leading American foresters over this time period.

Carl A. Schenck Forestry Timeline exhibitslibumtedu

In November 1908, Schenck hosted the Biltmore Forest Fair, designed to demonstrate to visitors the accomplishments and possibilities of scientific management and practical forestry techniques as well as to celebrate the 10th anniversary of his Forest School. The 3-day festival on the Biltmore grounds featured between 50 and 100 guests, and successfully demonstrated the real-life results of Schenck’s forestry and conservation practices.

Carl A. Schenck First in Forestry Carl Schenck and the Biltmore Forest School

Vanderbilt's forest ventures had always been unprofitable. Following several years that Schenck was unpaid but paid many employees out of his own pocket, in 1909 Schenck and Vanderbilt quarreled and Schenck was dismissed as forester of the Vanderbilt estate. Although the Biltmore Forest School was financially self-sustaining, he could no longer operate it on Vanderbilt's property. Schenck continued the school through 1913, though, by traveling with his students and operating from various locations including railway cars and locations in Germany.

Carl A. Schenck A Visit to the Carl Alwin Schenck Redwood Grove Peeling Back the Bark

Schenck's sustainable management theories and inclusion of hands-on training would influence forestry education in the U.S. for generations.

Death and legacy

Carl A. Schenck Americas First Forest Carl Schenck and the Asheville Experiment on

Schenck spent much of the rest of his life traveling throughout the world giving lectures on scientific forestry. He made his last visit to the United States in 1952. He died in Germany on May 15, 1955, at the age of 87. Schenck's teachings have proven to be the foundation of forestry education in America, and his contributions to the field have long outlived his own life.

Publications

Schenk wrote:

  • Our Yellow Poplar (1896)
  • Forestry for Kentucky (1899)
  • Forest Utilization (1904)
  • Biltmore Lectures on Sylviculture (1905)
  • Forest Management (1907)
  • Forest Policy (1911)
  • References

    Carl A. Schenck Wikipedia