Allegheny National Forest

The Forest Service brought new concepts in forest management to the Allegheny Plateau — multiple benefits and sustainability. The Organic Act of 1897 introduced the National Forest mission: to improve the forest, provide favorable conditions for water flows, and furnish a continuous supply of wood to meet people’s needs. On these lands, seedlings for tomorrow’s forest are the focus of forest management activities. Watersheds are managed to ensure clear water for fisheries like trout and clean drinking water for all.

Over time, various laws added other benefits like wilderness, heritage resources and grazing to the original ideas of watershed protection and continuous wood supply. The Multiple Use-Sustained Yield Act of 1960 recognized outdoor recreation and habitat for wildlife and fisheries.

The motto “Land of Many Uses” captures the National Forest goal of a healthy, vigorous forest that provides wood products, watershed protection, a variety of wildlife habitats and recreational opportunities — not only for us today, but in a sustainable way so future generations can enjoy these benefits, too.

http://www.fs.usda.gov/allegheny/

Allegheny Plateau is mostly devoid of agriculture

While a lot of people think of Pennsylvania for it's dairying and other forms of farming, the Allegheny Plateau region, sometimes called the Pennsylvania Wilds from Wellsboro to Warren, south to Dubois and Williamsport really is mostly timber country -- a land of camps and trees, along with oil and natural gas wells. The highly forested area is much larger then just National Forest.

Sugar Run

Greatly widened with the creation of the Allegheny Reservoir.