After a series of devastating
wildfires in 1893,
U.S. President Grover Cleveland created the Black Hills Forest Reserve on February 22, 1897. U.S. President
William McKinley issued a presidential proclamation on September 19, 1898, appending the Black Hills Forest Reserve geographic boundaries while acknowledging the forest preservation decrees established by the
Timber Culture Act and
Forest Reserve Act of 1891. Upon the creation of the Forest Service in 1905, the reserve was transferred to the new agency under the United States Department of Agriculture and redesignated as a
National Forest two years later.
Lakota words
pahá sápa meaning "hills that are black" (literally "black hills" as the adjectives (sápa) follow the noun) may be one of the factors in the regions naming. Early settlers and explorers called the Laramie Range the Black Hills prior to
Lt. G. K. Warren's expedition in 1857. Prior to explorations by the
La Verendrye brothers in 1742, many tribes frequented the Black Hills including
Ponca,
Kiowa Apache,
Arapaho,
Kiowa and
Cheyenne for at least the past 10,000 years. The smallpox epidemics of 1771 to 1781 broke the will of the Arikara who prior to that time held the Sioux east of the Missouri.
American Horse's winter count of 1775-76 is interpreted as depicting the Sioux discovery of the Black Hills. The mountains and other key features in and around the Black Hills and now within the Forest were considered sacred to indigenous peoples and many came here on
vision quests, for
hunting and for trade. The Black Hills National Forest provided the
Capitol Christmas Tree in 1997, a 63-foot
white spruce. ==Geography==