The Passing of an Access Warrior – Jack Atcheson Sr.
January 1, 2018
On Wednesday, December 27, 2017, Jack Atcheson Sr., who was 85, peacefully passed away, in his home town of Butte.
Jack’s funeral will be January 4, 1:00 pm at St. Patrick’s Church, 329 W Mercury St, Butte, MT 59701
Tony Schoonen will be providing the eulogy.
In addition to being a hunter/angler, combat veteran and business owner, Jack Atcheson Sr. was a dedicated advocate for public lands and stream access in Montana.
In a PLWA interview on access,
Jack passionately stated, “If we don’t keep it for the kid’s generation
coming up, they’re losing it; they’re losing it almost everyday.
Somebody has to fight, and I’m glad we’re all part of it.”
Jack’s access battling began on Oct. 1978, when three
Montana hunters, one of which was Jack Atcheson Sr., were sharptail
hunting in Malta, north of the Milk River, on BLM land. They tried to
hunt the connected “blue colored” Montana state school trust lands
section on the map, only to have the grazing lessee drive up in his
pickup truck threatening them, “You guys get the hell off my land now!”
This incident sparked Atcheson’s quest to find out about
these “blue” State school trust lands, joined by Tony Schoonen and
later Jack Jones.
On March 31, 1980, Jack Atcheson Sr., Tony Schoonen, and Jack Jones formed and filed the Montana Coalition for Access on State Public Lands,
Inc., funding their work out of their own pockets. The name would later
be changed to Montana Coalition For Appropriate Management of State
Lands, Inc. The Coalition led the charge for our state lands access.
Inspired by the State Lands Coalition, another coalition
was formed, on April 14, 1980 – the Montana Coalition for Stream
Access, Inc., which Jack was a member of. It was decided to first pursue
Stream Access, which became law in 1985.
In 1985, the Public Land Access Association (PLAAI) was
created to carry the banner, later embracing stream access, becoming
Public Land/Water Access Association (PLWA). Jack was a PLWA Director
from 2003 through 2007; and President of the association from 2003-2005.
In recognition of his hunting/angling conservation, Jack
Atcheson Sr. won Outdoor Life Magazine’s Conservation Award, in 2000,
for a “lifetime of achievement in the conservation of wildlife and
wildlife habitat, and your tireless efforts on behalf of hunting and
fishing access for American sportsmen.”
Continuing the fight for public lands/waters access, a warrior to the end, Jack wrote in 2016,
“I’m pleased so many others picked up where we left off. Don’t give up.
It’s amazing what a small group of sportsmen can achieve, if they try
often.”
On the passing of Jack, PLWA Vice-President John Gibson
lamented, “Jack was very instrumental in the fight for public access,
especially in the background. I don’t think he got the credit he
deserved, in the eyes of the public. We have lost too many of our
founders recently. For access’ sake, I hope that we can replace some of
these old warriors.”
There is a quote from Sir Isaac Newton, “If I have seen further than others, it is by standing upon the shoulders of giants.”
Jack Atcheson Sr. is one of the those access giants!