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Holly Springs National Forest

Holly Springs National Forest
IUCN category VI (protected area with sustainable use of natural resources)
Puskus Lake 3.JPG
Puskus Lake in Holly Springs National Forest
Map showing the location of Holly Springs National Forest
Map showing the location of Holly Springs National Forest
Map of the United States
Location northern Mississippi
Nearest city Tupelo, Mississippi
Coordinates 34°44′00″N 089°08′00″W / 34.73333°N 89.13333°W / 34.73333; -89.13333Coordinates: 34°44′00″N 089°08′00″W / 34.73333°N 89.13333°W / 34.73333; -89.13333
Area 155,661 acres (629.94 km2)
Established June 15, 1936
Governing body US Forest Service
Website National Forests in Mississippi

The Holly Springs National Forest (HSNF) was established by the United States Forest Service on June 15, 1936 during the tenure of United States Department of Agriculture Chief Forester Ferdinand A. Silcox. That same year, it was combined administratively with the Bienville, De Soto and Homochitto national forests, known collectively as "National Forests in Mississippi." The Holly Springs Ranger District controls 155,661 acres (243.2 sq mi) of Forest Service land, interspersed with 530,000 acres (828.1 sq mi) of privately owned properties, within the national forest's proclamation zone.

Before the HSNF was established, much of the land was abandoned agricultural land with rapidly eroding soils. These rolling hills are now covered with loblolly and shortleaf pines, and upland hardwoods. The Civilian Conservation Corps used loblolly pine because it was easy to plant, was suitable for the depleted soils of the north central hills, and cast a large load of needles to help prevent further erosion. The land owned by the Forest Service is intermingled with private farms and woodlots. The district ranger for the HSNF is headquartered in Oxford, Mississippi.

In 1983, the Reagan administration proposed auctioning off the entire national forest to private bidders as part of a nationwide asset management program. The plan was largely abandoned.

The HSNF is located in northern Mississippi and is divided into two major sections. The largest section lies to the southeast of the city of Holly Springs and straddles U.S. Highway 78. The second section 20,776 acres (84.08 km2), sits about 40 miles (64 km) southwest of the main section, in Yalobusha County, between Coffeeville and Oakland, just east of Interstate 55. In descending order of land area the forest is located in parts of Benton, Lafayette, Marshall, Yalobusha, Tippah, and Union counties.


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