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W.J.
McCabe Chapter |
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McCabe IWLA
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What We've Done Many of
the wild areas Minnesotans take for granted were protected by, or even
created through, the efforts of the Izaak Walton League's many state
chapters. Consider that the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness would
likely not exist without the Ikes. (Read about the Ike's long involvement
in the canoe country
here.)
Strong
Ties To This Region
From
our beginning in 1922, the Izaak Walton League of America has stood for
balanced resource protection and use. And from the onset the IWLA has had
strong ties to northeastern Minnesota. In fact, during the 1920s our first
national president, Will Dilg, paddled in what later became the Boundary
Waters with a young guide named Sigurd Olson. Dilg
promised Olson that the Ikes would do what was necessary to protect that
wilderness, a promise we've kept for seventy-five years, even when doing
so was controversial in our own backyard. Sig Olson went on to not only
become a revered wilderness advocate, but channeled much of his efforts to
preserve wilderness through the IWLA. But we haven't been sitting still since then. Some other IWLA projects and accomplishments you may be familiar with are the Upper Mississippi River National Fish and Wildlife Refuge, Tamarac National Wildlife Refuge, Hamden Slough National Wildlife Refuge, Thief Lake Wildlife Management Area, and Voyageurs National Park. The League-sponsored Clark-McNary Act provided the funds nearly 60 years ago to acquire land for the creation, or in some cases expansion, of the region's National Forests, including the Chippewa, Superior, Nicollet and Chequamegon National Forests. And the Minnesota Division was responsible for the creation of the Dorer Memorial Hardwood Forest in southeast Minnesota. Read more about these accomplishments, and others, here. Think
of what Minnesota and neighboring states would be like without the legacy
of these public lands! In
Your Own Back Yard
The
McCabe Chapter, based in Duluth, has been active in protecting wild places
right here in our own back yard. The acquisition and creation of the
Blackhoof River Wildlife Management Area was an IWLA project, as was the
acquisition of the west bank of the Knife River from Scenic Highway 61 to
the Expressway, which we later turned over to the Department of Natural
Resources. Our chapter has been a leader in protecting trout streams in
the region, including on-going work on the much beleaguered Miller Creek
in Duluth. In just
the past few years, the McCabe Chapter has been active on numerous fronts.
Here's just a partial list:
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