Inscription
During the 1930s severe drought plagued the states in the great plains and deepened the depression. High winds caused dust storms which blackened the sky. In 1934, President Franklin Roosevelt initiated a program to help stabilize the blowing soil and put people to work. His prairie states forestry project envisioned planting wide belts of trees from North Dakota to Texas to protect cropland and reduce damage to the environment. The Nation's first shelterbelt was planted on the H.E. Curtis farm near Mangum in Greer county, OK. Oklahoma's first state forester George R. Phillips planted the first tree on Mar. 18, 1935 from 1935 to 1942, 223 million trees were planted in 18,599 miles of shelter belts throughout the plains states with 2,996 miles in Oklahoma.
The nation's number one shelterbelt is located files miles east and one mile north. Like many of the original shelterbelts and the narrower windbreaks planted since then, it continues to provide conservation benefits to this day.
Greer County Conservation District
Oklahoma Dept of Agriculture-Forestry Service
Oklahoma Forestry Association
Oklahoma Historical Society
219-1995
Manufactured by Wills Granite Products, Granite, Oklahoma
Location
Sources
More markers in Greer
Nation's First Shelterbelt
The United States, OK
Nation's First Shelterbelt WPA Site No. 1 Planted March 18, 1939 By WPA and CCC Workers Partial Renovation 1984 By Okla.
Lake Creek Marker
This monument is dedicated to the pioneers who settled the community.
Old Greer County
Mangum, OK
When the United States purchased Louisianna Territory from France, 1803, Upper portion of Red River as far west as 100th meridian...
Old Greer County Museum
Mangum, OK
Located in Mangum, Oklahoma, the Old Greer County Museum was established as a depository to preserve and keep the knowledge, history and...
Peace On The Plains
About 5 mi. S.E. Wichita Village in Devil's Canyon was scene of 1st meeting between the U.S. and Plains Indians in Oklahoma to promote...
