The Committee on Public Lands was created in 1816 during the
14th Congress chaired by senator
Jeremiah Morrow. In its early years, it managed the settlement of the
recently purchased Missouri Territory. Over time, the committee oversaw the western expansion of the United States, including the
Texas annexation, the
Oregon Treaty, the
Mexican Cession, and the
Gadsden Purchase. The
Homestead Act of 1860, which would have benefited western settlers and migrants, was a result of jurisdiction of the Public Lands Committee. In 1849, the
Department of the Interior was established, with the Public Lands Committee serving as legislative oversight. The committee became responsible for enacting legislation to conserve nature and its resources. Due to the actions of the committee, Congress began working towards preservation of forests, wilderness, and historical landmarks with the signing of the
Antiquities Act in 1906 and the establishment of the
National Park Service in 1916. The committee has gone under a number of name changes, but the functions and policy have remained similar to its creation. In 1921, the committee merged with the Committee on Geological Surveys to become the Committee of Public Lands and Surveys. Following the
Legislative Reorganization Act of 1946, it became the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, absorbing the jurisdiction of the
Indian Affairs, Territorial and Insular Affairs, Mines and Mining, and Irrigation and Reclamation committees. Its most recent iteration, the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, was established on February 4, 1977, after the Committee System Reorganization Amendments of 1977. ==Jurisdiction==