'') tree in Lassen National Forest, California
Peter Lassen Peter Lassen will be long remembered with having a hospital, college, high school, street, mountain peak, creek, national park, county, and national forest each carrying his name. He was ambitious, his timing was perfect, and, like his contemporary pioneer,
Johann Augustus Sutter, everything that could go wrong, did go wrong. Lassen was murdered by an unknown person in the
Black Rock Desert, Nevada Territory, two months after being profiled by ''
Hutchings' Illustrated California Magazine''. The profile is contained in the February 1859 edition of Hutching's. Lassen was murdered April 26, 1859. The murderer was never found, but the list of suspects is long: Disgruntled clients of the
Lassen Trail or various business associates were among those suspected. The conclusion of the magazine profile includes this quote from Lassen: "Beware of bad partners, and nine-tenths of the lawyers, and if need be, add the other tenth, and thus eschew law and lawyers altogether." Apparently his killer heeded the advice. Lassen, Edward Clapper and Americus Wyatt, were on a silver mining expedition, camped in the Black Rock Desert north of
Virginia City, Nevada Territory. This was the beginning of the Comstock silver excitement in northern Nevada. Clapper and Lassen were both shot and killed as the trio was breaking camp. Wyatt survived and was the only witness. Officially a band of Paiute Native Americans received blame but few pioneers believed the story. Lassen's body was recovered and buried near his cabin at Honey Lake Valley. Clapper's remains remained in what is now known as Clapper Canyon. A partial skeleton was discovered there by hikers in 1991, and Clapper's remains have since been interred near Lassen's grave. of 5 square leagues on the south bank of Deer Creek in what is now
Butte County, California. This grant provided access to the
Sacramento River, an important issue during the pioneer period for transportation of goods and people. Lassen lost his estate around 1851 by mortgaging the land to further his business interests. He then migrated to the Honey Lake Valley where he attempted mining, and which is in modern-day Lassen County. Lassen County was established on April 1, 1864, five years after his death.
Lassen Peak Reserve The beginnings of Lassen National Forest began in 1891 with congressional passage of what has become known as the Forest Reserve Act. This bill was actually entitled: "An Act To Repeal Timber Culture Laws And For Other Purposes". The first federal forest reserves were created soon after President
William Henry Harrison signed the repeal into law. Section 24 of the act authorized the President of the United States to set aside
public lands as forest reserves without further permission from Congress. In addition to Harrison, President
William McKinley set aside forest lands, as did President
Theodore Roosevelt, until
Congress put a stop to the practice in 1907, by banning additional set asides in six western states. California was not among those six states but was later added to the ban. Lassen Peak Reserve was not created until 1905, less than a month before Congress approved the Transfer Act, which took the reserves away from the
United States General Land Office and the Department of Interior. Instead, the newly created U.S. Forest Service managed the lands under the Department of Agriculture. The reserves then became the National Forests. In 1908 Lassen absorbed portions of
Diamond Mountain National Forest and exchanged lands with
Plumas National Forest and
Shasta National Forest. Lassen National Park was carved from the Lassen National Forest in 1916, when Congress approved the creation of the National Park Service, administered by the Interior department. Lassen Peak already enjoyed protection as a
National Monument, set aside by Roosevelt in 1907. The uneasy relationship between the
US Forest Service and the
National Park Service continued for several decades, perhaps culminating in 1931 when Congress forbade Lassen National Park from expanding its boundaries. Later, in 1939, Interior Secretary
Harold Ickes proposed the opposite-of combining the national parks and forests into an agency that would take a preservationist approach. ==Recreation==