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These 22 conservation-minded presidents preserved the most national park land

Lawn Love shares the 22 U.S. presidents most passionate about national park preservation.

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A view of the mountain tops and lake in St. Elias National Park in Wrangell, Alaska.

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Which American presidents did the most to preserve the land we love as national parks and preserves?

With the presidential election around the corner and the U.S. National Park Foundation receiving a record-breaking grant of $100 million, Lawn Love ranked 22 presidents who preserved the most national park land.

The rankings factored in the acreages of 94 different national parks, national military parks, national preserves, and national trails. 

Note: Not all public lands were included in this story. NPS units such as national historic sites, national historic parks, and national monuments were not included, nor were conservation lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management or Forest Service. See the full methodology here.

Presidential rankings

Top Five Close Up

Table listing the top 10 presidents for park preservation.

Lawn Love

No. 1: Jimmy Carter | Protected parkland: 40.5 million acres

No. 2: Woodrow Wilson | Protected parkland: 12 million acres

  • Term in office: 1913-1921
  • Vice President: Thomas R. Marshall
  • Political party: Democrat
  • Highlights: The National Park Service was created by President Woodrow Wilson in 1916.

    Over the course of his term, Wilson preserved parks from the nation's tallest peak, Denali, to the tropical landscapes of Haleakalā and the Hawaii Volcanoes.

    Wilson is also credited with preserving Acadia in Maine, Rocky Mountain in Colorado, and the Grand Canyon

No. 3: Franklin D. Roosevelt | Protected parkland: 7.4 million acres

  • Term in office: 1933-1945
  • Vice President: John Nance Garner | Henry Agard Wallace | Harry S. Truman
  • Political party: Democrat
  • Highlights: Numerous iconic park destinations—from Big Bend in Texas to the South Dakota Badlands to the Florida Everglades—were preserved by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Several California sites were protected as well, including Channel Islands, Death Valley, and Joshua Tree.

    As president, Roosevelt introduced the Civilian Conservation Corps which employed 3 million workers for land conservation projects—removing invasive plants and restoring trails and historic sites. The CCC also created numerous state parks. 

    FDR expanded the NPS to include historic sites like cemeteries and memorials, and transferred the management of many public monuments from the War Department and Army Corps of Engineers to NPS.

    Over the course of his lifetime, FDR planted half a million trees in his hometown of Hyde Park, New York. His home is now a national historic site

No. 4: Calvin Coolidge| Protected parkland: 4.8 million acres

  • Term in office: 1923-1929
  • Vice President: Charles Gates Dawes
  • Political party: Republican
  • Highlights: President Calvin Coolidge preserved the glaciers and rainforest of Glacier Bay in Alaska.

    He also protected iconic Southeastern spots like Mammoth Cave in Kentucky, Shenandoah in Virginia, and America's most-visited national park, the Great Smoky Mountains in North Carolina and Tennessee.

    Coolidge also celebrated Forest Protection Week and Arbor Day.

    His childhood home has been preserved by Vermont as a state historic site.

No. 5: Ulysses S. Grant | Protected parkland: 2.2 million acres

  • Term in office: 1869-1877
  • Vice President: Schuyler Colfax | Henry Wilson
  • Political party: Republican
  • Highlights: Grant signed the Yellowstone National Park Protection Act in 1872, designating Yellowstone as the first national park. 

    However, Grant never visited Yellowstone, and in creating the park forced out and displaced the numerous Indigenous tribes native to the region.

    His family estate in Missouri is preserved as a national historic site.

Key insights

Yellowstone, America's first national park, was designated in 1872 by Ulysses S. Grant (No. 5). Since then, conservation efforts have expanded to 431 distinct sites managed by the National Park Service, including 63 national parks and 19 national preserves.

The Forest Reserve Act of 1891, signed by Benjamin Harrison (No. 7), was an early legislative step toward federal conservation efforts. Theodore Roosevelt (No. 13) later signed the Antiquities Act of 1906 into law, introducing federal protections for natural resources and historic sites. 

Among the biggest steps for national park conservation over the past two decades was the establishment of Mojave National Preserve in California by Bill Clinton in 1994, protecting over 1.5 million acres of land. 

  • Two presidents had a close relationship with NPS before Inauguration Day: Herbert Hoover (No. 10) was named president of the National Parks Conservation Association in 1924, and Gerald Ford (No. 12) was a park ranger for one summer in 1936 at Yellowstone.
  • Of the nation's 10 biggest national parks, seven are located in Alaska. The largest park is Wrangell – St. Elias—protected by Jimmy Carter (No. 1) in 1978—at around 13 million acres.

Behind the ranking

For each of the 94 national parks, preserves, military parks, and trails included in this ranking, the analysis used data on park size (acreage) and their establishment dates, which were then attributed to the respective presidential administrations. 

Notes:

  • Not all units managed by the National Park Service were included in this ranking. Battlefields, historical parks and sites, monuments, and memorials were not considered, since many are designated to preserve historic sites like military forts, buildings, and ruins—and not to preserve wild lands or natural resources. 
  • Conservation lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management or Forest Service were not included in this ranking.

Final thoughts

Conservation is a complex topic: the development of national parks hasn't been positive for everyone. Many national parks were created by forcibly displacing the Indigenous stewards who had occupied the land for ages. Several parks in the Jim Crow era were segregated, including Hot Springs, Shenandoah, and the Great Smoky Mountains. 

Today, some parks are working to restore cultural ties and partner with Native communities for conservation efforts. There are now more than 80 co-stewardship agreements between Indigenous Tribes and communities and NPS sites, featuring groups like the Ancestral Lands Conservation Corps and cultural programs and projects at parks like Acadia, Grand Canyon, and Glacier Bay

After a hefty budget cut from Congress, the parks will benefit from a record-breaking $100 million gift to the National Park Foundation, dedicated to enhancing wildlife conservation and exploring the parks' Indigenous histories.

Visitation records show that parks are more popular than ever, meanwhile staffing has been steadily decreasing as parks struggle with smaller budgets. With increased instances of severe weather on the horizon, it will become even more costly to maintain and repair national parks from storm damage. 

Parkland is worth the cost to manage, not only because of the priceless scenery, but because national parks boost local—many rural—economies and provide over 310,000 jobs within park communities.

This story was produced by Lawn Love and reviewed and distributed by Stacker Media.