Born to Frank Elmer Masland and Mary Esther Gossler on December 8, 1895, he was the grandson of Charles Henry Masland, founder of the Carlisle carpet company C. H. Masland & Sons. During World War I, Masland attended
Dickinson College and graduated in 1918. That same year, he became an ensign in the
United States Navy Reserve. While he did not fight overseas, he served on a sub chaser searching for German U-boats along the east coast of the United States. Masland served in the Navy for two years and the Naval Reserves for two more. He was honorably discharged on April 29, 1921. Masland and his brother Robert Paul relocated C. H. Masland & Sons from
Philadelphia to
Carlisle, Pennsylvania in 1919. Construction for the new building began on July 1, 1919. Between 1930 and 1961, Frank Masland served as the president of C. H. Masland & Sons, leading the company through
World War II and into the decades that followed. During the war, the company converted its operations entirely to the war effort making waterproof canvas and earned the
Army-Navy E Award for excellence in wartime production five times. In 1951, the carpet company purchased "Kings Gap", a 32-room stone mansion in
Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. In 1973, the company transferred ownership of the property to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania through the auspices of the
Nature Conservancy. Today, the property is known as
Kings Gap Environmental Education Center. Besides the carpet company, Masland was active in both the
National Association of Manufacturers and the
Pennsylvania Manufacturers Association. He served as director of the First National Bank of Mount Holly as well as the president and director of Denicron Corporation from 1939 into the late 1950s. Masland served as a regional director of the
Small Business Administration during the 1960s and 1970s. He also served as a trustee of
Wesley Theological Seminary and Dickinson College. Masland was awarded honorary doctorate degrees from
Lycoming College and
Lebanon Valley College, and received the
YMCA "Master of Men" Award. A member of
The Explorers Club,
Cosmos Club,
University Club of New York, and the
Boone and Crockett Club, Masland was a member in a small group of Colorado River Canyoneers who ran the Grand Canyon in the 1940s. Frank Masland first visited the rim of the
Grand Canyon in 1938 and first boated the entire length of the
Colorado River in Grand Canyon in 1948 with
Norman Nevills and
Otis R. Marston. On that river trip Masland acquired the nickname "Fisheyes." Marston listed Masland as the 97th person to travel all the way through the Grand Canyon by the water route. Masland traveled through Grand Canyon again in 1949 with Nevills and
Mary Ogden Abbott and in 1954 and 1956 with Marston. After he boated Grand Canyon in 1949, Masland purchased a canvas on wooden frame
Folding kayak. He paddled the craft from
Mexican Hat, Utah, down the San Juan River into Glen Canyon in July, 1950. He took the same boat through Glen Canyon again in 1952, arriving at
Lees Ferry,
Arizona in time to join
Barry Goldwater and others to dedicate a plaque to the deceased Norm and Doris Nevills at the
Navajo Bridge. Masland and Marston conducted horse packing trips in the slickrock rim country of
Glen Canyon during the construction of
Glen Canyon Dam. On their first such trip in 1954, the group reached an arch Masland had seen from the road to Navajo Mountain Lodge in 1950. At the Arch, Marston nicknamed him "Archeyes." In 1954 Masland lobbied Secretary of Interior
Douglas McKay in opposition to
Echo Park Dam. Masland served on the National Park Service Advisory Board from 1958 to 1979, serving three years straight as its chair. Masland worked closely with Secretary of Interior
Stewart Udall and
Lady Bird Johnson to create
Canyonlands National Park. In a 1965 letter, Udall wrote “Whether it’s hiking with me on the Serengeti Plains on Tanganyika, running the Allagash River of Maine or scrambling on the high country of Utah, Frank Masland has demonstrated his devotion to the out of doors and preserving a conservation heritage for future generations of Americans. Thank heavens for people like Frank!” In 1980, 1,270 acres of secondary old growth forest in the
Tuscarora State Forest in Pennsylvania was named in his honor as the Frank E. Masland Jr. Natural Area. After four years of negotiation, Masland donated $200,000 (~$ in ) in 1987 to the
National Park Service and
Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission for the purchase of 50 acres of private land in
Boiling Springs, Pennsylvania, including Children's Lake, for transfer to the Appalachian Trail Conference Land Trust (today's
Appalachian Trail Conservancy). == References ==