and U.S. Forest Service chief
Edward P. Cliff at the dedication of the Pinchot Institute in Milford, Pennsylvania in 1963. The idea for the Pinchot Institute came about in 1961 when Gifford Bryce Pinchot proposed to donate the Pinchot estate at
Grey Towers to serve as the home of a new center for education and studies in environmental and natural resource policy. The Pinchot Institute was dedicated by President
John F. Kennedy on September 24, 1963. In 1966, the
U.S. Department of Interior designated Grey Towers as a
National Historic Landmark. Grey Towers needed significant renovation to bring the historic home to its new role as a world-class conference center. In 1980, more than $16 million in federal, state, and private funds were raised to do so. The restoration was completed in 2001 and Grey Towers reopened to the public on August 11, 2001—the 115th anniversary of the original completion of Grey Towers. It further strengthened the shared mission of the Pinchot Institute and Grey Towers to continue
Gifford Pinchot’s philosophy that in order to be effective, natural resource conservation must be not only ecologically sound, but economically viable and socially responsible. With the heads of the developing environmental movement appointed to the board—including Gifford Bryce Pinchot, Forest Service Chief Ed Cliff, Laurence Rockefeller, Fairfield Osborne—the Institute undertook the development of a national conservation education curriculum. After twenty years serving on the Senate staff, Jim Giltmier was selected as the first executive of the Institute. He helped to develop key statutes governing the conservation, management, and research of natural resources in the United States. Today the Pinchot Institute has grown to be an internationally recognized organization with programs and projects both nationally and abroad. Starting in 2002, the Pinchot Institute partnered with rural communities to sustainably manage tropical forests in
Ecuador through their Ecomadera project. In addition to protecting
tropical forests and privately owned buffer forests adjacent to globally significant
biodiversity reserves, the Institute is working to provide living wages to impoverished communities. ==See also==