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Cumberland Island National Seashore by Lary M. Dilsaver
Cumberland Island National Seashore by Lary M. Dilsaver




Cumberland Island National Seashore by Lary M. Dilsaver

The fate of the island has galvanized national environmental groups, the descendants of powerful families, historic preservation organizations, and African American heritage societies. Dilsaver uses the island as an example of the difficulty of converting privately owned lands into public space. In Cumberland Island National Seashore: A History of Conservation Conflict, Lary M. The story of how the park arrived at its current status, however, is as rugged and wild as the land itself. Today, more than three decades after its legal designation as the Cumberland Island National Seashore, the island is home to a magnificent array of natural resources, including a seventeen-mile beach and the largest surviving stand of maritime oak forest in the United States more than half is currently designated a wilderness area and is a serene and beautiful public space.

Cumberland Island National Seashore by Lary M. Dilsaver

These parties and the other landowners, both old and new, clashed over their conflicting interests in retaining land for personal use, selling to developers, or entrusting parcels to the National Park Service for public use. The death in 1962 of their last child, Florence Carnegie Perkins, ended the restrictions of a complex family trust arrangement and led to the division of their land among Carnegie descendants. Located off the coast of Georgia, Cumberland Island was once the retreat of some of America's wealthiest families, most notably the family of Thomas Carnegie, brother of steel magnate Andrew Carnegie, and his wife Lucy.






Cumberland Island National Seashore by Lary M. Dilsaver