| Choctawhatchee National Forest | |
|---|---|
| Location | Florida,USA |
| Nearest city | Tallahassee, FL |
| Coordinates | 30°34′30″N86°32′30″W / 30.575°N 86.541667°W /30.575; -86.541667 |
| Area | 1,152 acres (466 ha) |
| Created | November 27, 1908 |
| Governing body | U.S. Forest Service |
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Choctawhatchee National Forest is aUnited States National Forest established by PresidentTheodore Roosevelt on November 27, 1908. The supervisory headquarters was established atDeFuniak Springs and moved toPensacola in September 1910. It remained there until 1936 when it was relocated toTallahassee. The Choctawhatchee's two districts (Easy Bay-Camp Pinchot andNiceville) were separated by what is nowState Road 85.
National defense needs promptedCongress to transfer the national forest to theWar Department just prior toWorld War II. On June 27, 1940, Congress transferred the 340,890 acres (1380 km2) of the Choctawhatchee from theForest Service to the War Department (and subsequently to its successor's constituentUnited States Department of the Air Force) for military purposes. The law provided that the land might be restored to national forest status by proclamation or order of the President when it was no longer needed for military purposes. It has been home toEglin Air Force Base since. In descending order of amount of land area the forest is located in parts of southernOkaloosa,Walton, andSanta Rosa counties.[citation needed]
During the early years, Camp Pinchot was the Forest Supervisor's summer headquarters. At that time, the only mode of transportation from Pensacola (site of the main supervisory headquarters) was by boat. In 2000, Camp Pinchot celebrated its 50th anniversary as the residence for the Eglin Air Force Base Commander.
The current portion of the Choctawhatchee, that is still managed by the Forest Service, consists of several dispersed parcels that total only 1,110 acres (1.73 sq mi, or 4.492 km2)[1] and are managed by theApalachicola National Forest. Some parcels lost many of their national forest characteristics by changing land-use over the years and others are difficult to manage because they are not contiguous. They may therefore be traded or sold to allow the Forest Service to acquire privately held land within the boundaries of other national forests in the state.