reviews

A FOREST RETURNS
        
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"I show Jean Andrews' A Forest Returns every spring when I teach my Appalachia: Land and People course. Why? As an environmental geographer interested in landscape transformation I find the story of the creation of the Wayne National Forest both compelling and edifying. Students enjoy the film because they learn about a slice of their backyard many didn't even know existed. Given the economic and environmental crises we face today, A Forest Returns reminds us that we have been down this road before and, further, that visionary leadership and hard work have the potential to see us through again. I've watched it several times and it never fails to inspire."
               -
Geoff Buckley, Associate Professor of Geography, Ohio University

"A superb portrayal of environmental change in Southeastern Ohio that uses a masterful combination of techniques -- including "first person" interview footage carefully linked with rare photographic images from the past, and comparative views of the "same" landscapes today. "A Forest Returns" confirms how interesting local environmental history is, and how inspirationally it can be portrayed on film."
               - Richard Francaviglia, author Hard Places: Reading the Landscape of
                 America's Historic Mining Districts [American Land & Life Series]

“The Civilian Conservation Corps made significant contributions to Ohio’s forest system, including the Wayne National Forest. Newsman Ora Anderson covered the transformation from barren, over-worked farms to lush wooded hillsides. Skillfully blending Anderson’s eyewitness account with historical material and contemporary scenes, producer Jean Andrews has captured an important slice of Ohio’s New Deal experience.”
                - Pat Williamsen, Ohio Humanities Council

“Jean Andrews won “Best Documentary” at the Second Appalachian Film Festival in Huntington in June for her MA thesis film, “So Here I Am: An Eye Witness Account of the Beginning of the Wayne National Forest in Appalachian, Ohio.” The 29-minute film uses local newspaper editor/reporter Ora Anderson to recount the tale of the CCC coming to southern Ohio in the 1930s to create a forest where denuded land stood. I greatly enjoyed the film, recalling B.J. Gudmundsson’s film on Cal Price and Bill Richardson’s film, “Mine Wars,” which competed with the film in Huntington. It shows the desolation caused by a century of clear-cutting and stripmining and the current beautiful woods. I am sure that anyone who loves the vast Appalachian forest would love to see this film, especially the people who manage the many other forests created by the CCC during that era.
                 - Steve Fesenmaier, West Virginia’s Graffiti Magazine

“Coal was the biggest story of the 19th Century in the region. What we never realized is that the return of the forest was probably the biggest story of the 20th Century. A Forest Returns supports this insight by telling this little told story using Ora Anderson's lovely narrative and an impressive array of visual documentation."
                 
- John Winnenberg, Little Cities of Black Diamonds Council

“This video is about the Wayne National Forest, the only national forest in Ohio. Its story is told by 93-year-old Ora E. Anderson, former newspaperman, lobbyist, conservationist, and bird carver, who was involved in the project, as a newspaperman and citizen, from its inception. His words are accompanied by imaginative video work, wonderful archive photographs, and soothing music. The idea for the forest started in the depths of the Great Depression, Mr. Anderson tells us, as a means of putting money into the pockets of destitute farmers by buying their lands at $6 to $8 an acre, land that had been almost completely deforested by farming and timbering. Young men in the Civilian Conservation Corps lent their young muscles to the task of planting a million trees and stopping erosion. However, Mr. Anderson makes clear that the main reason for the success of the project was that it encouraged failing farmers to move off the land, and when they stopped farming it, trees grew back. Today, the Wayne National Forest encompasses 833,990 acres of private and public land. This video is a wonderful tribute to one of the great programs of the much maligned New Deal era. It also allows the remarkably articulate Ora Anderson, who personally planted 30,000 trees, to shine as a storyteller. Jean Andrews and Steve Fetsch have produced a winning documentary.”
            
  - Historian Loyal Jones, former director of the Berea College Appalachian
                Center

"This film really hit home for us in southwest Virginia. The mountains here were naked of all trees 60-100 years ago.  The timber companies left with their profits and turned over the land to the Forest Service. We now have a young, diverse forest covering those mountains again. And hope for the long term recovery of Clinch Ranger District/Jefferson National Forest and the life forms here. Unfortunately, for many of the mountains in the coal counties where we live, clear cutting is only one type of environmental destruction. Wise County where we live has had over 25% of our land surface blown up for coal, destroying not only the trees and flowers but the streams and soil structure. This land may never recover like the logged mountains."
               -
 Diana Withen, President, The Clinch Coalition