USDA Forest Service
 

San Bernardino National Forest

 
 

San Bernardino National Forest
602 S. Tippecanoe Ave
San Bernardino, CA 92408

909-382-2600
TTY 800-877-8339

United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service.

About Us

 

The wild lands of the San Bernardino and San Jacinto Mountain Ranges were designated a National Forest more than a hundred years ago. 

Originally, the forest was home to Native Americans, since long before recorded history. Mexican and European settlements occurred sporadically for the first half of the 19th century, but the chain of events that led to the creation of the National Forest in 1893 really began after California became part of the United States in 1848 (it had been part of Mexico since 1822).

In 1855, gold was discovered in the San Bernardino mountains. Over the second half of the 19th century, mining, timber, and grazing grew quickly, taking a heavy toll on the land. By the end of the 19th century, significant sectors of the forest had been felled and overgrazed. Streams and rivers were silting in and water quality was declining. Meanwhile a growing population and a thriving citrus industry made increasing demands for clean drinking and irrigation water.

A pioneering populace, who had conquered what seemed like an endless frontier, began to realize that it now must manage the land much more thoughtfully. 

A Board of Forestry report in 1886 found that "the necessity of the hour is an intelligent supervision of the forest and brush lands of California, with a view to their preservation." 

The Forest Reserve Act was passed in 1891, giving the president authority to "set apart and reserve, in any state or territory having public land bearing forests . . . as public reservations."  From this act was born the San Bernardino Forest Reserve, which became the San Bernardino National Forest in 1907.  The San Bernardino National Forest as public land was set aside for the conservation of natural resources such as trees, water, minerals, livestock range, recreation, or wildlife. 

The San Bernardino National Forest is comprised of several departments and three Ranger Districts.  Our Forest has Fire, Police, Planning and Permits, Recreation, and a Roads department just like a city, county or state government.  In addition we have a scientific arm, that deals with issues relating to cultural, water, soil, wildlife, plants and trees. 
 




San Bernardino National Forest Inventory
 

Natural Features

 

Total Acreage (SBNF land)

671,686

Inholding Acreage (non-USFS land within the Forest)

147,313

   

Wilderness Acreage

 

Bighorn Mountain Acres

11,800

Cucamonga Acres

8,581

San Gorgonio Acres

56,722

San Jacinto Acres

32,248

Santa Rosa Acres

13,787

Sheep Mountain

2,401

   

Threatened, Endangered & Sensitive Species

 

Animal Species

71

Plant Species

85

   

Roads and Trail Mileage

 

Wilderness Trails

150

Motorized Trails

36

Hiking/Equestrian/Biking Trails

352

Paved Roads

60

Unpaved Roads

1,178

   

Cultural and Historic Features

 

Prehistoric Archaeological Sites

616

Historical Archaeological Sites

330

Multi-Component Sites

43

   

Facilities

 

Visitor Centers

3

Family Campgrounds

23

Group Campgrounds

21

Primitive Campsites

100+

Picnic Areas

13

Equestrian Campgrounds

5

Accessible Fishing Piers

2

Staging Areas For Motorized Trails

2

Trailering Sites For Motorized Trails

8

   

Special Uses

 

Recreation Residences

786

Water / Irrigation Pipelines

98

Power lines

30

Organization Camps

27

Oil and Gas Pipelines

14

Motion Picture / TV Locations

13

Recreation Events

13

Dams

7

Winter Recreation Resorts

7

Target Shooting Ranges

3

Airports / Heliports

2

Military Training Area

1

Other Special Uses

475

   

Data subject to change, original source; 2004 SBNF Business Plan

 

United States Forest Service - San Bernardino National Forest
Last Modified:  Thursday, 11 December 2008 at 18:45:59 EST


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