Horace M. Albright
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Horace Marden Albright (January 6, 1890 – March 28, 1987) was an American conservationist.
Horace Albright was born 1890 in Bishop, California, the son of George Albright a miner. He graduated from University of California, Berkeley in 1912 , and earned a law degree from Georgetown University.
Albright married his college classmate Grace Noble and they had two children.
After graduation he worked for the Department of Interior in Washington, D.C. Albright became a legal assistant to Stephen Mather when Mather became Assistant Secretary in charge of National Parks, and later assisted Mather when the National Park Service (NPS) was established in 1917. As legal assistant he helped acquire land for several new national parks in the east. When Mather became ill, and managed the NPS as acting director. Albright was superintendent of Yellowstone National Park and, for a short time, Yosemite National Park.
On January 12, 1929 Albright succeeded Mather as the second director of the NPS and held the post until August 9, 1933.
In 1933 Albright resigned to work for the U. S. Potash Corporation and U. S. Borax and Chemical Corporation, serving variously as director, Vice President, and General Manager. During this time they lived in New Rochelle, New York.
Albright died in Van Nuys, California in 1987. [1]
[edit] References
- ^ "National Park Service Co-founder Dies," Yosemite 49(1):4 (Spring 1987)
[edit] External links
- National Park Service Biography
- "Oh, Ranger!" by Horace M. Albright and Frank J. Taylor (1928, 1929, 1934, 1972). Whimsical look at managing the National parks
- Creating the National Park Service: The Missing Years by Horace M. Albright and Marian Albright Schenck (Univ. of OK Press, 1999) Memoirs about creating the NPS written with the assistance of Albright's daughter