Dearest Cecil:
It seems churlish to chide Stephen L. from Chicago, who wrote in 1982, about Death Valley becoming a national park in 1994. Just saying…
Link to column: Why is Death Valley a national monument rather than a national park? - The Straight Dope
I’m not sure what happened here, but the dating on columns gets screwey sometimes: columns get revised for publication in the books, for example, and the books don’t carry the date of the original column.
For an even more intersesting example of presidential politics in regard to national monuments and national parks, look up the history of Bill Clinton’s designation of the 1.9 million acre Grand Escalante National Monument in 1996.
I wonder what Steven L. thinks of the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument, designated by President George W. Bush in 2006.
Wow – that’s over 89 million acres. Makes the Grand Escalante seem like not such a big deal. I thought Bush was against this sort of thing.

Wow – that’s over 89 million acres. Makes the Grand Escalante seem like not such a big deal. I thought Bush was against this sort of thing.
Whatever else I may think of his administration’s legacy, I count this as both a noble gesture on his part and a genuinely valuable conservation measure.
Check out some of the pictures of the underwater environments within the Monument.