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  1. He ran as the Progressive nominee in the 1914 U.S. Senate election, but was defeated by incumbent Republican Senator Boies Penrose. [61] [62] [63] [64] The Progressive Party collapsed after Roosevelt refused to run in the 1916 presidential election, and Pinchot subsequently re-joined the Republican Party. [65]

  2. In the 1930 November election, Republican anti-Pinchot political forces, led by Vare, and those who favored repealing Prohibition, opposed Pinchot, but Pinchot still managed to defeat Democrat John M. Hemphill by more than 32,000 votes out of two million cast.

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  4. Apr 2, 2024 · Gifford Pinchot was a pioneer of U.S. forestry and conservation and a public official. Pinchot graduated from Yale in 1889 and studied at the National Forestry School in Nancy, France, and in Switzerland, Germany, and Austria. Upon his return home in 1892, he began the first systematic forestry.

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  5. May 9, 2018 · Gifford Pinchot was an important figure in the American conservation movement. As the first chief of the US Forest Service, Pinchot tripled the nation’s forest reserves, protecting their long term health for both conservation and recreational use.

  6. Today, Gifford Pinchot is generally regarded as the "father" of American conservation because of his great and unrelenting concern for the protection and rational development of the American forests.

  7. Jan 15, 2019 · January 20, 1931 - January 15, 1935. Party Republican. Born August 11, 1865. Passed October 4, 1946. Birth State Connecticut. School Yale University. Family Married Cornelia Elizabeth Bryce; one child. About. A native of Simsbury, Connecticut, GIFFORD PINCHOT graduated from Yale University in 1889 and went on to study forestry in Europe.

  8. He was a member of the Republican Party for most of his life, though he joined the Progressive Party for a brief period. Gifford Pinchot was an American forester and politician. He served as the fourth chief of the U.S. Division of Forestry, as the first head of the United States Forest Service, and as the 28th governor of Pennsylvania.

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