Name: Deepthi Chandra Teacher: Boniface - 1
2016 NHD Outline Worksheet- Exploration, Encounter & Exchange in History
Topic
John Muir Inspires Conservation
Thesis
John Muir’s endless love for nature inspired others and pushed him to explore a new concept of American land use and conservation, resulting in him encountering commercialism and resistance as well as the exchange of ideas about nature preservation across America, sparking the American conservation movement.
Exploration: Give examples of where, what, how, why, positives and negatives
The Great Age of Exploration was coming to an end. The last explorers, including John Muir, did not plant flags; they planted ideas that
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Great thinkers were viewed like celebrities. A new novel or poem collection was something everyone talked about. Writing was not easy for John Muir but it gradually allowed Muir to raise his voice as a protector of our nation’s wilderness. He knew he had to share his knowledge about his beloved nature with more people. His Century articles drew attention to the devastation of mountains meadows and forests by sheep and cattle. John Muir’s articles had an immediate impression on eastern readers and attracted tourists to Yosemite. John Muir also wrote a series of conservation articles for Atlantic Monthly, an important publication that had many influential readers. The American Forest, Forest Reservations and National Parks and the pieces that followed played a large role in building public support for saving America’s forests. The Mountains of California (First Book) – was very popular and influenced many Americans to support the conservation movement. (Published fall 1894). The things John Muir did and wrote about represent the beginning of the American conservation movement. He published over 300 articles and 10 major books. His writing had spiritual quality because of his endless love for nature, which inspirited and moved people to
The environmentalist movement of the late 19th and early 20th centuries presents a picture of America at the time: torn between the desires to expand while seeking to protect nature. Although all members of the movement sought to protect nature, there were two predominant schools as to how to go about this. In their two philosophies, they created two methods for human interaction with the wilderness. The conservationist movement can be called the utilitarian movement, and sought the greatest good for the greatest number over the longest term. In contrast, the preservationist school aimed at keeping nature in its current state, although the
1. Karl Jacoby book brings the remarkable accounting of the negative aspects of conservation movement to the sunlight. Jacoby uses the early years of Adirondack Park, Yellowstone National Park, and the Grand Canyon Forest Preserve to demonstrate his theme of the locals’ reactions to the creation of the park and the actions from the conservationists. And the fantasies the early conservationists’ promulgated of the locals of being satanic rapists of the environment are dispelled (193).
Muir wrote many books, most about nature and some about his personal life and adventures. His
John Muir was a muckraker who protested against the expansion of people and animals that would ruin our soon to be national parks. Muir was a man that loved to explore natural formations in nature and traveled around the world to see as much natural land as possible. As he traveled around the world, he found out that California was his place to live. In California, his favorite places to explore and watch were the Sierra Nevada Mountains and Yosemite. As more and more settlers moved West, the land that Muir loved was soon to be destroyed by herds of animals and people looking for a place to build their homes. Muir wrote most of his 300 articles and 10 major books in Oakland, California. In Muir’s writings, he elegantly
John Muir, a brilliant Transcendentalist, has written hundreds of enlightening environmental essay to emphasize the adamant need to save these sacred kings of the forests, the Redwoods. Within Muir’s vivid and emotional entries, specifically “Save the Redwoods”, John utilizes rhetorical devices such as personification, analogy, and Religious allusion in order to express the vital need to save the trees.
Muir was captivated by nature at an early age and he traveled to explore the environment. An early memory of a walk was with his grandfather. Muir heard a sound and “dug into the haystack until he uncovered a mother field mouse with half-dozen tiny babies clinging to her teats. In that moment the wondrous world of nature began to open for Johnnie Muir.” Ever since that walk with his grandfather, John Muir was
* The year 1865 is the birth year of all things natural, wild, and free. Leopold gives it this name because in that year, John Muir offered to buy from his brother, who then owned a farm 30 miles East of Leopold’s oak, a sanctuary for wildflowers that had gladdened his youth. His brother declined but could not suppress the idea. (February, pg. 17)
John Muir is arguably the most influential conservationist in American history. He was an active member in the preservation of the American wilderness from the late 1800’s until he passed in 1914. Muir is often referred to as the “Father of the National Parks” because of his efforts in the establishment of several National Parks. One of the biggest flaws of American history textbooks in need of change is the fact that they do not include the conservationists who have preserved the environment so today the same beauty can be see the way that they saw it. John Muir was involved in many American conservation efforts including the co-founding of Yosemite National Park, founding of the Sierra Club, and his overall career as a
The Age of Exploration was a period from the early 15th century and continuing into the early 17th century, during which European ships traveled the world to search for new trading routes and partners to feed burgeoning capitalism in Europe. This period was rooted in new technologies and ideas growing out of the Renaissance. So far this points towards positive characteristics like a growing economy, discovery, new technologies, and cooperation between neighboring nations. But their was sacrifices that were made to reach such excellence. The trade monopolies that were bypassed fell, this may seem positive as well, but economies would fall with them. The natives of foreign countries would be subjected to invasion, disease, sabotage. And the land
Yet Americans in this period also revered nature and admired its beauty; the spirit of nationalism fed the growing appreciation of the uniqueness of the American wilderness
For thirty years John Muir has tried to persuade people to preserve the area but it wasn't easy. Soon enough he got a letter from Roosevelt saying he wanted to go on a camping trip with just Muir. According to Fleming ¨ Roosevelt already expressed his outrage over destruction of the wilderness.¨. Muir agreed to guide Roosevelt. Roosevelt was dazzled by Yosemite Valley that he went on to give a speech saying ¨The sequoias deserve protection, simply because it would be a shame to let them disappear.¨ according to Fleming.
The Age of Exploration was a time period that has had significant influences in the modern world. It was the moment in which Europe was brought out of the Dark Ages and into an era of discovery. The risks taken within the 15th and 18th century allowed both positive and negative outcomes to be introduced to the European Exploration. There were many motives for this era, and many outcomes came about. However, they were both negative and positive. To summarize the motives of this age, a simple combination can be stated. The main purposes of the Age of Exploration was God, Gold, and Glory.
Environmentalism has always been two sided. Nature versus urban. locals versus national. Frequently, large tracts of public and federal land are bought and developed by industry. Pristine wilderness turned to bustling epicenters of human activity, all in the name of progress and economic growth. This tale of preserving natural wilderness is one that begins with John Muir, an advocate against the taming of Yosemite national park and the Hetch-Hetchy reservoir, while the head of the US Forest Service, Gifford Pinchot, insisted on the reservoir to supply the city of San Francisco with water. This timeless epic of conservation or preservation brings us to the Jumbo Valley, a vast expanse of uninhabited, pristine wilderness home to diverse
During the 1800’s, the period of the life of Walt Whitman, there were several notable writers who felt strong ties to the natural world and allowed their work to reflect this. These included Henry David Thoreau, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Emily Dickinson and John Muir and they were all players in the Transcendentalism movement that was coming to life. That theory – that people found their own version of spirituality, often through a connection to nature – is one that all of these great minds espoused in one way or another. But, perhaps Ralph Waldo Emerson had the most influence over Walt Whitman. Their views of nature were closely matched and Emerson, already being an admired writer, was someone Whitman looked up to.
In North America, the classic voice of the colonizing person’s connectedness to nature and a has been the romantic individualist writing of wilderness.