The New York State College of Forestry was reestablished on July 28, 1911 at
Syracuse University, through a special bill signed by
New York's Governor
John Alden Dix.
Louis Marshall, with a summer residence at
Knollwood Club on Saranac Lake and a prime mover for the establishment of the Adirondack and Catskill
Forest Preserve (New York), understood that a "proper" College of Forestry was needed in New York state. In 1910, Marshall became a
Syracuse University Trustee and confided in Syracuse University Chancellor
James R. Day his desire to have a forestry school at the university. Marshall was designated by his fellow trustees to lobby Governor
Charles E. Hughes towards such an end: :...one of the greatest duties of State and National Governments is that of conserving our natural resources. First among these are our forests... there is no greater subject as to which there is more widespread ignorance, than that of forest conservation and the planting of forests.... The State of New York... is the owner of millions of acres of forest lands which are in constant jeopardy, and which is beginning to suffer the consequences of the evils of deforestation... [The State] is under an imperative duty to ... call a halt to the wild rage for destruction which seems to grow by what it feeds upon.... If the bill should become a law, it is the intention of the Board of Trustees of Syracuse University to select ... a number of gentlemen who are enthusiastic in their desire to further the great cause of forest conservation... By 1911, Marshall's efforts resulted in passage of New York State Senate Bill No. 18, "An Act to establish a State College of Forestry at Syracuse University, and making appropriation therefor", to establish and fund the school. The bill was signed by Governor Dix, and the College "incorporated by Chapter 851 of the Laws of 1911". Marshall was elected president of the newly reestablished college's board of trustees, a position he held until his death in 1929. The relationship were not always smooth, for example in 1913, there were frictious exchanges between Syracuse University Chancellor James R. Day and Board of Inquiry appointed by the newly elected Governor
William Sulzer over the proper location of the college (other location being Cornell). botanist, plant ecologist, biogeographer and Professor of Botany at Syracuse University. In 1911, in addition to assuming the deanship of forestry he organized the Agricultural Division at Syracuse University. The first class enrolled 52 students and had only two faculty members, but tuition was free. In 1913, funds for construction of Bray Hall, the first campus building, were still languishing in the state capital. Louis Marshall, as president of the college's board of trustees, wanted action, so two years after the appropriation bill was first signed by Governor Dix, Marshall went to the newly elected governor
William Sulzer, who reportedly had wanted to further delay signing the $250,000 appropriation. It is reputed that Marshall handed him a pen and said, "Sign it." Governor Sulzer complied. By 1913, according to Marshall, the college had "160 students, representing 46 counties of [New York] State. It has developed a faculty of eight trained men, all of whom are graduates of forest schools of high standing.... Dr. Hugh P. Baker, who is the Dean of the College ... has received applications from over eight hundred prospective students." Dean Baker said that these prospective student inquiries come from twenty-five States and six foreign countries. Graduate courses at the college were authorized in 1918. Female students were enrolled as early as 1915, but the first female graduated from ESF only in 1940. This is what
ESF president Dr.
Cornelius B. Murphy, Jr. had to say at the re-dedication of Marshall Hall on January 19, 2001: "Louis Marshall is largely the reason that everyone from the college is here today. Louis Marshall was recruited by Chancellor Day in 1910 to make the concept of the 'forestry college' at Syracuse University a reality. Louis was tenacious, prodding both the Governor and the Legislature to take action. Louis Marshall... lobbied for the $250,000 appropriation to make a building a reality. I think that it is safe to say that Louis Marshall was our father, our first leader and our first forester. Today we rededicate this building to his memory and accomplishments." The re-dedication events included the unveiling of two bronze plaques: one in honor of Louis Marshall and the other in honor of his son, ESF alumnus,
Bob Marshall. Demonstration Forest, soon to be followed by a 15,000 acre
Archer Milton Huntington and
Anna Hyatt Huntington Wildlife Forest in
Newcomb, New York. Brown subsequently secured the state appropriation for Marshall Hall, which offered greater teaching and laboratory space. Brown also procured increases in state appropriations for teaching salaries, as well as a grant of $10,000 for forest investigations.
Samuel N. Spring was appointed dean of the New York State College of Forestry in Syracuse, NY in February 1933, succeeding Baker. Spring served as Dean of the College of Forestry until his retirement in May 1944. Among the salient differences between the forestry programs at Cornell and Syracuse were the wood utilization, wood chemistry and pulp & paper majors at the latter. ==Incorporation into SUNY==