United States Forest Service
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United States Forest Service
Summary
United States Forest Service is a federal law enforcement agency of the United States[1]. It draws 911 Wikipedia views per month (federal_law_enforcement_agency_of_the_united_states category, ranking #9 of 37).[2]
Key Facts
- United States Forest Service held citizenship in United States[3].
- United States Forest Service's field of work was forest management[4].
- United States Forest Service is in the country of United States[5].
- United States Forest Service's image is recorded as ForestServiceBackground.PNG[6].
- United States Forest Service's instance of is recorded as federal law enforcement agency of the United States[7].
- United States Forest Service's instance of is recorded as United States federal agency[8].
- United States Forest Service's instance of is recorded as forestry agency[9].
- United States Forest Service's flag image is recorded as Flag of the United States Forest Service.svg[10].
- United States Forest Service's founder is recorded as Theodore Roosevelt[11].
- United States Forest Service's founder is recorded as Gifford Pinchot[12].
- United States Forest Service's logo image is recorded as US Forest Service.png[13].
- United States Forest Service's logo image is recorded as Logo of the United States Forest Service.svg[14].
- United States Forest Service's seal image is recorded as Logo of the United States Forest Service.svg[15].
- United States Forest Service's headquarters location is recorded as Sidney R. Yates Federal Building[16].
- United States Forest Service's flag is recorded as flag of the United States Forest Service[17].
- United States Forest Service's ISNI is recorded as 0000000404043120[18].
- United States Forest Service's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 155555932[19].
- United States Forest Service's GND ID is recorded as 16290861-1[20].
- United States Forest Service's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as n79054932[21].
- United States Forest Service's Union List of Artist Names ID is recorded as 500247418[22].
- United States Forest Service's Bibliothèque nationale de France ID is recorded as 119862057[23].
- United States Forest Service's IdRef ID is recorded as 067107044[24].
- United States Forest Service's child organization or unit is recorded as National Agroforestry Center[25].
- United States Forest Service's child organization or unit is recorded as Bitterroot National Forest (Agency)[26].
- United States Forest Service's child organization or unit is recorded as Flathead National Forest (Agency)[27].
Body
Founding
Founders include Theodore Roosevelt[11] and Gifford Pinchot[12]. Recorded inception include +1905-00-00T00:00:00Z[28] and +1905-02-01T00:00:00Z[29].
Identity
United States Forest Service's part of is recorded as United States Department of Agriculture[30].
Leadership
United States Forest Service's chairperson is recorded as Vicki Christiansen[31].
Operations
United States Forest Service's headquarters location is recorded as Sidney R. Yates Federal Building[16]. Its parent organization or unit is recorded as United States Department of Agriculture[32]. Subsidiaries include National Agroforestry Center[25], an United States federal agency[33], in United States[34], founded in 1992[35], headquartered in Lincoln[36]; Bitterroot National Forest (Agency)[26], an United States federal agency[37], in United States[38], founded in 1907[39], headquartered in Hamilton[40]; Flathead National Forest (Agency)[27]; Coconino National Forest (Agency)[41], an United States federal agency[42], in United States[43], headquartered in Flagstaff[44]; Mount Hood National Forest (Agency)[45]; and Gila National Forest (Agency)[46], an United States federal agency[47], in United States[48], headquartered in Silver City[49].
Industry
United States Forest Service's field of work was forest management[4].
Why It Matters
United States Forest Service draws 911 Wikipedia views per month (federal_law_enforcement_agency_of_the_united_states category, ranking #9 of 37).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 19 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[50] It is known by 59 alternative names across languages and contexts.[51]