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Herbert Hoover National Historic SiteA park ranger with a class of elementary school students outside a white cottage with a white picket fence.
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Herbert Hoover National Historic Site
Nature & Science
 
Flowering Goldenrod in the 81-acre tall grass prairie.
(NPS Photo)
Flowering Goldenrod in the 81-acre tall grass prairie
Congress established Herbert Hoover National Historic Site to commemorate the life and times of Herbert Hoover, but this park offers more than a glimpse of human history. The NHS offers a vision into the rich natural history of this land through stewardship and interpretation of the resources.

The National Historic Site covers 187 acres of land in historic West Branch, Iowa. This landscape of ridges and swales once supported prairie, savanna, and forest. Today the countryside consists of farms and fields, but at Herbert Hoover NHS, visitors step back in time. Eighty-one acres of reconstructed tallgrass prairie sway in the breezes on the south and west portions of the park. A small, quiet stream meanders through the prairie and along side the small cottage where President Hoover was born. Herbert Hoover filled his childhood days with outdoor experiences. He swam and fished in Wapsinonoc Creek. He played in the nearby woodlot. He gathered fall nuts in the forest. These experiences gave Herbert Hoover an appreciation of nature that persisted throughout his life.
Scientists monitor plants in the tallgrass prairie.
Inventory & Monitoring
Natural resources inventory and monitoring at Herbert Hoover NHS
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A volunteer collects prairie seeds surrounded by blossoming yellow goldenrod.
National Public Lands Day
Volunteer to restore native tallgrass prairie on National Public Lands Day.
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Two bright yellow flowers in a green field.
Tallgrass Prairie
Visit the 81-acre restored tallgrass prairie.
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Trees and snow-covered banks along a creek.
Hoover Creek
A tributary of the West Branch of Wapsinonoc Creek
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Yellow coneflowers in the lush green prairie grass.  

Did You Know?
General Land Office surveyors who first came to Iowa commented that the territory was fit only for waterfowl. Eighty-five percent of Iowa used to be soggy tallgrass prairie.
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Last Updated: February 19, 2008 at 12:13 EST