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A man of the trees.


"Mighty oaks from little acorns grow" could have been a tailor-made motto for Richard St. Barbe Baker Richard St. Barbe Baker (1889-1982) was an English forester, environmental activist, and author who contributed greatly to worldwide reforestation efforts. As a leader, he founded an organization, still active today, whose many chapters carry out reforestation internationally. , founder of the Men of the Trees Men of the Trees is am international, non-profit, non-political, conservation organisation. It is involved in planting, maintenance and protection of trees. It was founded by Richard St. Barbe Baker. Also known as the International Tree Foundation.  organization. He helped save the California redwoods, battled to stop the Sahara spreading, and was said to be responsible for the planting of 27,000 million trees.

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Baker's remarkable life was recently commemorated with a simple bronze sculpture bronze sculpture. Bronze is ideal for casting art works; it flows into all crevices of a mold, thus perfectly reproducing every detail of the most delicately modeled sculpture. It is malleable beneath the graver's tool and admirable for repoussé work.  in his birthplace birth·place  
n.
The place where someone is born or where something originates.


birthplace
Noun

the place where someone was born or where something originated

Noun 1.
 village, West End on England's South Coast.

Born in 1889, Richard St. Barbe Baker lived in that age of British Empire British Empire, overseas territories linked to Great Britain in a variety of constitutional relationships, established over a period of three centuries. The establishment of the empire resulted primarily from commercial and political motives and emigration movements  when do-gooding was regarded as a natural duty and responsibility. Baker was destined des·tine  
tr.v. des·tined, des·tin·ing, des·tines
1. To determine beforehand; preordain: a foolish scheme destined to fail; a film destined to become a classic.

2.
 for the church but, while at college in Canada, saw dustbowls created through lack of trees and decided to devote his life to forestry.

The organization Men of the Trees was conceived from his experiences in Kenya. As a junior forestry officer, Baker heard of whole tribes dying as the forests on which they relied were destroyed.

In one of his more than 20 books he wrote of a Saharan tribe: "They found themselves in the last remaining triangle of the forest with 1,000 miles of desert in front and a 1,000 miles of desert behind them. The Chiefs had forbidden marriage and the women refused to bear children as the end of the forest, and with it their survival, was in sight. They did not wish to raise sons and daughters for certain starvation starvation, condition in which deprivation of food has forced the body to feed on itself. Causes are famine, fasting, malnutrition, or abnormalities of the mucosal lining of the digestive system.  so they had resolved to die out."

The government didn't have enough money to ward off the forests' demise, so Baker had locals fight the desert's spread by planting trees.

He also realized that important events in Africa were preceded by a dance. Hence, on July 22, 1922, 3,000 A-Kikuyu warriors who'd already been rehearsed arrived in Muguga, "the place without trees," and danced before an audience of 12,000. "That day a power was generated with joyfulness that brought warring tribes together to vie with each other in planting trees," Baker wrote.

He'd worked with Lord Baden Powell in the early years of the Boy Scouts movement, so Baker enlisted en·list·ed  
adj.
Of, relating to, or being a member of a military rank below a commissioned officer or warrant officer.


enlisted
Adjective
 young warriors and farmers as Forest Scouts who were then nicknamed by the neighbouring Masai "Watu wa Miti" or "Men of the Trees."

Barbe wrote about the Men of the Trees in a June 1924 article in American Forests American Forests is a nonprofit conservation organization that promotes healthy forests and urban tree planting.

The organization was established in 1875 as the American Forestry Association, by physician/horticulturist John Aston Warder and a group of like-minded citizens
, then known as American Forests and Forest Life. He later wrote for the magazine about his efforts in the Sahara.

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The scouts promised to plant 10 trees or seedlings each year. If they couldn't think of a good deed to do for the day, they had to go to the forest station and plant 50 saplings. When the rains came, these were planted out as a new forest.

Two years later in London, Men of the Trees was born and Baker began to work on saving California's redwoods. Forming the Save the Redwoods Fund, he spent 10 years campaigning, fundraising, and getting government backing, resulting in the creation of a 17,000-acre reserve.

In 1926 he organized the first World Forestry Congress. But he is best known for his work on Men of the Trees, traveling worldwide to persuade people and their governments of the crucial need for tree cover. He wrote articles, pamphlets, and books; lectured; and lobbied heads of state. Richard St. Barbe Baker died in 1982, still campaigning, at age 93.
COPYRIGHT 2004 American Forests
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:News from the World of Trees; Richard St. Barbe Baker
Author:Mole, Graham
Publication:American Forests
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 22, 2004
Words:565
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