United States Secretary of the Interior |
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Official Seal |
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Formation | March 3, 1849 |
First holder | Thomas Ewing |
Succession | Eighth |
Website | www.doi.gov |
The United States Secretary of the Interior is the head of the United States Department of the Interior.
The US Department of the Interior should not be confused with the concept of Ministries of the Interior as used in other countries. Ministries of the Interior correspond primarily to the Department of Homeland Security in the US cabinet and secondarily to the Department of Justice.
The Department of the Interior oversees such agencies as the Bureau of Land Management, the United States Geological Survey, and the National Park Service. The Secretary also serves on and appoints the private citizens on the National Park Foundation board. The Secretary is a member of the President's Cabinet.
Because the policies and activities of the Department of the Interior and many of its agencies have a substantial impact in the western United States,[1] the Secretary of the Interior has typically come from a western state; only one of the individuals to hold the office since 1949 is not identified with a state lying west of the Mississippi River. The Secretary of the Interior is eighth in the United States presidential line of succession.
The current Secretary of the Interior in Barack Obama's administration is former Senator Ken Salazar of Colorado.
Contents |
No. | Portrait | Name | State of Residence | Took Office | Left Office | President(s) | |
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1 | Thomas Ewing | Ohio | March 8, 1849 | July 22, 1850 | Zachary Taylor | ||
Millard Fillmore | |||||||
2 | Thomas M. T. McKennan | Pennsylvania | August 15, 1850 | August 26, 1850 | |||
3 | Alexander H. H. Stuart | Virginia | September 14, 1850 | March 7, 1853 | |||
4 | Robert McClelland | Michigan | March 8, 1853 | March 9, 1857 | Franklin Pierce | ||
5 | Jacob Thompson | Mississippi | March 10, 1857 | January 8, 1861 | James Buchanan | ||
6 | Caleb Blood Smith | Indiana | March 5, 1861 | December 31, 1862 | Abraham Lincoln | ||
7 | John Palmer Usher | Indiana | January 1, 1863 | May 15, 1865 | |||
Andrew Johnson | |||||||
8 | James Harlan | Iowa | May 16, 1865 | August 31, 1866 | |||
9 | Orville Hickman Browning | Illinois | September 1, 1866 | March 4, 1869 | |||
10 | Jacob Dolson Cox | Ohio | March 5, 1869 | October 31, 1870 | Ulysses S. Grant | ||
11 | Columbus Delano | Ohio | November 1, 1870 | September 30, 1875 | |||
12 | Zachariah Chandler | Michigan | October 19, 1875 | March 11, 1877 | |||
13 | Carl Schurz | Missouri | March 12, 1877 | March 7, 1881 | Rutherford B. Hayes | ||
14 | Samuel J. Kirkwood | Iowa | March 8, 1881 | April 17, 1882 | James A. Garfield | ||
Chester A. Arthur | |||||||
15 | Henry M. Teller | Colorado | April 18, 1882 | March 3, 1885 | |||
16 | Lucius Q. C. Lamar | Mississippi | March 6, 1885 | January 10, 1888 | Grover Cleveland | ||
17 | William Freeman Vilas | Wisconsin | January 16, 1888 | March 6, 1889 | |||
18 | John Willock Noble | Missouri | March 7, 1889 | March 6, 1893 | Benjamin Harrison | ||
19 | M. Hoke Smith | Georgia | March 6, 1893 | September 1, 1896 | Grover Cleveland | ||
20 | David R. Francis | Missouri | September 3, 1896 | March 5, 1897 | |||
21 | Cornelius Newton Bliss | New York | March 6, 1897 | February 19, 1899 | William McKinley | ||
22 | Ethan A. Hitchcock | Alabama | February 20, 1899 | March 4, 1907 | |||
Theodore Roosevelt | |||||||
23 | James Rudolph Garfield | Ohio | March 5, 1907 | March 5, 1909 | |||
24 | Richard Achilles Ballinger | Washington | March 6, 1909 | March 12, 1911 | William Howard Taft | ||
25 | Walter L. Fisher | West Virginia | March 13, 1911 | March 5, 1913 | |||
26 | Franklin Knight Lane | California | March 6, 1913 | February 29, 1920 | Woodrow Wilson | ||
- | Alexander T. Vogelsang | California | February 29, 1920 | March 13, 1920 | |||
27 | John Barton Payne | Illinois | March 15, 1920 | March 4, 1921 | |||
28 | Albert B. Fall | New Mexico | March 5, 1921 | March 4, 1923 | Warren G. Harding | ||
29 | Hubert Work | Colorado | March 5, 1923 | July 24, 1928 | |||
Calvin Coolidge | |||||||
30 | Roy Owen West | Illinois | July 25, 1928 | March 4, 1929 | |||
31 | Ray Lyman Wilbur | California | March 5, 1929 | March 4, 1933 | Herbert Hoover | ||
32 | Harold L. Ickes | Illinois | March 4, 1933 | February 15, 1946 | Franklin D. Roosevelt | ||
Harry S. Truman | |||||||
- | Oscar L. Chapman | Colorado | February 15, 1946 | March 18, 1946 | |||
33 | Julius Albert Krug | Wisconsin | March 18, 1946 | December 1, 1949 | |||
34 | Oscar L. Chapman | Colorado | December 1, 1949 | January 20, 1953 | |||
35 | Douglas McKay | Oregon | January 21, 1953 | April 15, 1956 | Dwight D. Eisenhower | ||
- | Clarence A. Davis | Nebraska | April 15, 1956 | June 8, 1956 | |||
36 | Fred Andrew Seaton | Nebraska | June 8, 1956 | January 20, 1961 | |||
37 | Stewart Udall | Arizona | January 21, 1961 | January 20, 1969 | John F. Kennedy | ||
Lyndon B. Johnson | |||||||
38 | Walter J. Hickel | Alaska | January 24, 1969 | November 25, 1970 | Richard Nixon | ||
- | Fred J. Russell | California | November 25, 1970 | January 29, 1971 | |||
39 | Rogers Morton | Maryland | January 29, 1971 | April 30, 1975 | |||
Gerald Ford | |||||||
- | D. Kent Frizzell | Kansas | April 30, 1975 | June 12, 1975 | |||
40 | Stanley K. Hathaway | Wyoming | June 12, 1975 | October 9, 1975 | |||
- | D. Kent Frizzell | Kansas | October 9, 1975 | October 17, 1975 | |||
41 | Thomas S. Kleppe | North Dakota | October 17, 1975 | January 20, 1977 | |||
- | Alfred G. Albert | January 20, 1977 | January 23, 1977 | Jimmy Carter | |||
42 | Cecil D. Andrus | Idaho | January 23, 1977 | January 20, 1981 | |||
43 | James G. Watt | Wyoming | January 23, 1981 | November 8, 1983 | Ronald Reagan | ||
- | J. J. Simonds III | New Jersey | November 8, 1983 | November 18, 1983 | |||
44 | William P. Clark, Jr. | California | November 18, 1983 | February 7, 1985 | |||
45 | Donald P. Hodel | Oregon | February 8, 1985 | January 20, 1989 | |||
- | Earl E. Gjelde | Virginia | January 20, 1989 | February 3, 1989 | George H. W. Bush | ||
46 | Manuel Lujan, Jr. | New Mexico | February 3, 1989 | January 20, 1993 | |||
47 | Bruce Babbitt | Arizona | January 22, 1993 | January 2, 2001 | Bill Clinton | ||
- | Thomas N. Slonaker | Arizona | January 2, 2001 | January 31, 2001 | |||
George W. Bush | |||||||
48 | Gale Ann Norton | Colorado | January 31, 2001 | March 31, 2006 | |||
- | Lynn Scarlett | California | April 1, 2006 | May 26, 2006 | |||
49 | Dirk Kempthorne | Idaho | May 29, 2006 | January 19, 2009 | |||
- | Lynn Scarlett | California | January 19, 2009 | January 21, 2009 | |||
Barack Obama | |||||||
50 | Ken Salazar | Colorado | January 21, 2009 | Incumbent |
As of May 2010[update], eight former Secretaries of the Interior are alive. The most recent secretary to die was Walter Hickel (1969–1970), on 7 May 2010.
Name | Term of office | Date of birth |
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Cecil Andrus | 1977–1981 | August 25, 1931 |
James G. Watt | 1981–1983 | January 31, 1938 |
William P. Clark | 1983–1985 | October 23, 1931 |
Donald Hodel | 1985–1989 | May 23, 1935 |
Manuel Lujan | 1989–1993 | May 12, 1928 |
Bruce Babbitt | 1993–2001 | June 27, 1938 |
Gale Norton | 2001–2006 | March 11, 1954 |
Dirk Kempthorne | 2006–2009 | October 29, 1951 |
United States presidential line of succession | ||
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Preceded by Attorney General |
8th in line | Succeeded by Secretary of Agriculture |
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