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Sunday, 8th November 2009

The Scot who saved nature

John Muir, 1838-1914

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Published Date: 16 November 2006
NATURE has always been around us, but it could be said that it was a Scot who discovered the environment and pushed it to the front of our awareness.
John Muir, often regarded as the "Father of Conservationism", left Dunbar, a village in East Lothian, with his family when he was 11. His parents bought a farm in Wisconsin – a hard task made more difficult by Muir's stern taskmaster of a father. As if the back-breaking chores were not enough, his father insisted the teenager learn huge chunks of the Old Testament by heart.

Despite all these demands, Muir was left with enough determination to exercise his ingenuity. To find time to read as avidly as he wished, he constructed the ultimate in alarm clocks – a bed that tilted vertical at an appropriately early hour and set the young man upright and ready for the day ahead.

He was an avid reader and his studying gained him a place at the University of Wisconsin. He was obsessed by chemistry, geology and botany but none-the-less left university without a degree. He began work as an engineer in a wagon factory and seemed destined for a life in industry.

There a tragic accident – a severe eye injury – ruled out mechanical work, but paradoxically opened up an entire new life.Muir became a walker, but not just a rambler. In 1867 he began a 1,000-mile trek, intending to walk from Indiana to the Gulf of Mexico and then onto Central and South America. A dose of malaria forced a change of plans and Muir headed instead to California. He took a series of jobs around Yosemite Valley, working there throughout 1869. He travelled extensively and began writing his theories on the development of the environment. His growing interest in glaciers sent him to Alaska in the 1880s to further develop his ideas on how the landscape was formed.

His interest in how our natural heritage was formed led him to believe that it was something that had to be protected from the greed and thoughtlessness of man, and that he was to lead "the battle between landscape righteousness and the devil." His colourful, non-stop campaigning won over public opinion and a succession of US presidents. He persuaded Theodore Roosevelt to come camping with him and converted the most powerful man in America to take up his cause and especially the concept of national parks.

Muir's last big battle for the environment was campaigning against a plan to dam the Hetch Hetchy Valley to provide water for San Francisco. When, in 1913, Roosevelt's successor Woodrow Wilson agreed to the building of the dam, Muir was sorely disappointed.

The conservationist died the next year on 24 December, some say of a broken heart after the failure to stop the destruction of a beautiful valley.

The US commemorated Muir with a stamp on the 50th anniversary of his death.



The full article contains 524 words and appears in scotsman.com newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 15 November 2006 10:35 AM
  • Source: scotsman.com
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Stamps
 
1

JerryC,

16/11/2006 02:19:51

It may be true that John Muir died of a broken heart over the loss of the wondrous Hetch Hetchy Valley in Yosemite National Park close to 100 years ago. Readers of the Scotsman should know that there is a very serious effort currently going on to correct that terrible mistake by the US government. Two organizations -- Restore Hetch Hetchy and Environmental Defense -- are leading a campaign to restore the valley to the natural condition that Muir so much appreciated. We have a plan under which San Francisco will still receive the water that flows through the valley without the need for the reservoir that currently has the valley under 300 feet of water. For much more information see www.hetchhetchy.org

Jerry
Restore Hetch Hetchy

2

JSP,

Canberra, Australia 16/11/2006 04:15:43

Very much like the successful campaign to save the Franklin in Tasmania from being flooded by a dam. Muir was very much ahead of his time, like so many other Scots!

3

Scotty,

16/11/2006 10:10:35

Having read several of John Muir's book, I personally believe him to be the Greatest Ever Scot. A true hero who's impact was worldwide and eternal

4

Robbie,

NZ 18/11/2006 21:10:38

Perhaps it’s semantics but I understood that Muir was a ‘Preservationist’ wanted to keep specific ecosystems untouched by humanity for ever. His one time friend but eventual nemesis, Gifford Pinchot of the Forest Service was a ‘Conservationist’ wanted to keep these ecosystem as ‘resources’ to be eventually used for ever increasing societal needs. Muir was a true believer in the ‘Land Ethic’ and that man should not destroy nature for his own greedy ends. Pinchot, although meaning well, was like governments, councils and companies looking at nature only from an economic viewpoint and conserving for a ‘later date‘- thus the planets woes.

5

paulos 33,

ferryhill 20/11/2006 12:45:12

i hear on the 29.10.06 you had a derek acorah haunted scotland book in your paper .how do i go about getting one as massive derek acorah fan many thanks paul

6

ColinCS9,

Wisconsin 20/11/2006 17:53:25

When I moved from Scotland to Wisconsin 26 years ago I discovered numerous schools, parks and societies names after Muir at a time when he was virtually unknown in his homeland. I'm glad too see
that has been remedied.


 

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