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A F T E R T H E WA R – A L E GAC Y

of

R E F OR E STAT I ON

By the end of the war, around 20% of Britain’s trees had been felled,

in some places changing the landscape dramatically.As Lloyd George

said, Britain ‘

had more nearly lost the war for want of timber than

of anything else

’.Aware that the war had exposed the lack of national

planning for forestry the Government passed the Forestry Act in

1919, establishing the Forestry Commission to lead on the creation of

a forest resource for future emergencies.

At first the board was made up of eight commissioners, chaired by

Simon Fraser, 14th Lord Lovat from 1919 to 1927.The Commission

was set up to increase the amount of woodland in Britain by buying

land for reforestation. It also started to promote forestry and the

production of timber for trade. During the 1920s the Commission

focused on acquiring land to begin planting out new forests.

Much of the land they bought was previously used for agricultural

purposes. The Forestry Commission’s estate continued to grow to

the extent that it was just over 360,000 hectares of land by 1934.The

low cost of land in the Depression and the need to increase timber

production meant that by 1939 the Forestry Commission was the

largest landowner in Britain.

General Simon Fraser, the 14th Lord Lovat and

3rd Baron Lovat at the Canadian Forestry Corps

Sawmill in the Forest of Conches. Note German

prisoners working. 22 July 1918.

10 materials of war