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I Wandered Lonely As A Cloud By John Muir Analysis
In John Muir's essay "The Calypso Borealis" he shows his love for flowers when he said "it seems
so wonderful that so frail and lovely a plant has much power over human hearts." William
Wordsworth also shows his love towards nature when he wrote his poem "I Wandered Lonely as a
Cloud," he shows the joy he finds in nature when he said "ten thousand saw I at a glance, tossing
their heads in a sprightly dance." Both John Muir and William Wordsworth find happiness and joy in
nature, but express it in different way. Muir and Wordsworth had to go through the worst to discover
the beauty of nature. Throughout both John Muir and William Wordsworth exciting adventure, they
experienced two totally different aspects with nature. In the first place, Muir ran into some of the
toughest obstacles, it was not until the end that he realized it was all worth it. Muir described the
flower as "the rarest ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Through some of his toughest times he was out there seeking adventure. "I wandered lonely as a
cloud that floats on high o'er vales and hills, when all at once I saw a crowd, a host of golden
daffodils." Before Wordsworth saw the field of daffodils he was lonely and depressed. But with the
beauty of nature it helped to transform his mood for the better. "For oft, when on my couch I lie in
vacant or in pensive mood, they flash upon my inward eye." "And then my heart with pleasure fills,
and dances with the daffodils." Furthermore, When Wordsworth is alone lying on his sofa, a feeling
of bored and sadness rush over him. But when the daffodils come to his mind he is able to imagine
his adventure with them, and that brings him joy and happiness. Both Wordsworth and Muir show
their love for nature by writing about their adventure. Through their journey they discovered how
the beauty of nature really does impact one's life for the better. How does the beauty of nature
impact
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Muir Woods Research Paper
Muir Woods National Monument is located in Marin County, about 15 miles away from San
Francisco. Muir Woods contains a large portion of Redwood Canyon and is near the base of Mount
Tamalpais. The park was established in 1907 when William Kent, a California congressman and
philanthropist, gifted 298 acres of costal redwoods to the federal government in attempt to preserve
the area from development. The now historic redwoods were the target of the North Coast Water
Company who planned to build a new reservoir. A year later on January 9th, President Theodore
Roosevelt signed the proclamation establishing Muir Woods as a National Monument (Dilsaver,
294). Under the Antiquities Act of 1906 Roosevelt proclaimed this area to be of "extraordinary
scientific ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The natural habitats of these birds being the redwoods allows them an abundant food supply, from
insects to a variety of flowering plants. The sustainability of these species of birds depends on the
conservation of Muir Woods. Dilsaver, Lary. "Preservation Choices at Muir Woods." Geographical
Review, vol. 84, no. 3, 1994, pp. 290–305. The content of the source above includes historical
information about the establishment of Muir Woods National Monument. Furthermore, this source
includes information of preservation efforts at the park since the 1980's, starting with the release of a
National Park survey that categorized threats to national parks, including Muir Woods, into three
categories, biological, visitor capacity, and purpose of the area. This source provides insight to
solutions to these problems, and the successful outcomes the National Park Service was able to
implement. Pilcher, Ericka, et al. "Understanding and Managing Experiential Aspects of
Soundscapes at Muir Woods National Monument." Environmental Management, vol. 43, no. 3,
2009, pp.
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John Muir Research Paper
John Muir is a Scottish–born American farmer, traveler, writer, and advocator. He was born on April
21, 1838, in Dunbar, Scotland and died on December 24, 1914, in Los Angeles, California
(Britannica, Introduction). He is recognized as one of the most influent modern humanist and
naturalist of the history of the United States. Even if he is known and acknowledged by many, this
historical peace seeker deserves more credit. He is not recognized enough for all of his positive
contributions to the United States' environment. He played a major role in the protection of nature.
Analyzing his accomplishments will strongly help to grant him the credit he really deserves and help
to associate him better with his realizations. What were John Muir's contributions ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
In 1906, he was named the first president of a newly formed group called the Sierra Club. He also
was one of its creators. John Muir saw the Sierra Club as ''the crystallization of his dreams and the
labor of a lifetime'' (Fox 107). In other words, for him, being the president of this organization was
finally the voice he needed for his sayings to really have impacts on the society. For once, his ideas
could have big impacts on the global population's behavior. Muir's main role in the Sierra Club was
to write important letters and mobilize the groups (Fox 114). His hard work with this organization
was quickly rewarded. Only a couple of months after its creation, the club was composed of 175
members and already had a real influence on the government policies in the United States (Fox
107). In the beginning, the Sierra Club concentrated its work on the creation of national parks and
on mountaineering matters (Fox 160). After a while, the Sierra Club was also recognized for its
promotion of a responsible use of the ecosystem, a sustainable use of the planet's resources and a
better education of the population in the subject of protecting and restoring nature (Worster 466). It
was and still is, engaged in an eternal fight. The Sierra Club is considered as one of the first
grassroots organization related to the environment in the world and it is still an
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Human Dominion and Separation from Nature
Other than Native American works, most of the works read for the class seemed to stem from or at
least were influenced by some vein of Christian thinking. This can't be helped because the western
world has been influenced by Christianity for centuries, and the foundational values still recognized
in this country in particular are protestant, even if they're not blatantly proclaiming the faith. In fact,
we even read through a few chapters of the Bible because the common theme and justification of
"human dominion over nature" stems from the primary story of the Bible in Genesis. This theme is
often a subject of great sadness or annoyance for nature writers like Wordsworth and Mary Oliver;
while authors like John Muir and Bill McKibben, whom do profess to the Christian faith, still see
nature as something spiritual because "dominion" means not just given authority, but also given the
responsibility for its protection. The first chapter of Genesis establishes humanity's place in God's
creation. Verse 26 in particular; "Then God said, "Let us make humankind in our image, according
to our likeness; and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea...and over every creeping thing
that creeps upon the earth."" The entire verse basically gives human authority over every genus on
the planet, putting us at the top of the food chain as it were (though in the Garden humans were
forbade to eat meat). A lot of people seem to see this verse as one of the causes of the human
superiority
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History Of Conservation And Preservation Efforts
History of Conservation
Along with Yosemite's natural and human history, there is also an immense history of conservation
and preservation efforts. There have been many failures, attempts, and successes in conserving the
marvelous national park we know as Yosemite. From its establishment as a national park, to the
transfer of the Yosemite Grant to Yosemite National Park, to the damming of the Hetch Hetchy
reservoir, great efforts have been made to preserve the breathtaking landscape of Yosemite.
Even though Yosemite Valley was legally and officially protected since 1864 by the passing of the
Yosemite Grant, it developed into a cluttered series of roads, hotels, cabins, and pastures because of
remiss state management. John Muir, a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Since Muir was a well–known writer at this point, Johnson posed the idea that Muir would become
public voice of a campaign created to preserve Yosemite as a national park.
After returning from their trip to Yosemite, Muir and Johnson started a media campaign in order to
generate public support for their cause: making Yosemite a national park. Muir wrote two articles
for Century Magazine that praised the captivating beauty of Yosemite and the horrible threats that it
faced. They further increased efforts to make Yosemite a national park by giving speeches around
the country. With the support of the public, Muir and Johnson's tireless efforts finally payed off. In
1890, Yosemite was appointed a national park.
Despite the designation of Yosemite as a national park, the original Yosemite Grant, which protected
Yosemite Valley and Mariposa Grove, still remained under the protection of California. However,
the state was not up to the task of maintaining those two areas. John Muir believed that in order to
be truly protected and salvaged, both Yosemite Valley and Mariposa Grove needed to be
permanently moved to Yosemite National Park. This time, however, it was a lot more difficult as
there was not as much support from people. Many hotel owners in Yosemite Valley opposed this
idea with great determination because they were afraid that their businesses would be shut down if
the grant was transferred to the federal government.
In 1903, President Theodore
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How Did John Muir Inspires Conservation
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 ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
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
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How Did John Muir Impact The World
John Muir was a Scottish–American writer, naturalist and advocate of the US Forest Association. He
also was one of the founding members of the Sierra Club. Muir's early life was a normal one for
most immigrants, he did some amazing things coming out of that though, and he impacted the world
in many ways. John Muir was born is Scotland, but moved to America when he was 11. He was
raised in a strict home, where his dad made him memorize the bible. He could recite the entire Old
and New Testaments by heart, at the age of 11. His father would not allow him to waste daylight on
reading or studying, so Muir created an invention to dump him out of bed early in the morning so he
could. He invented many other things, such as a clock that told the correct time and other things
made of wood. Muir was also the third of eight children. He and his younger brother roamed the
fields and woods around their home whenever they could. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
He had an accident that almost made him blind, and he really started to go after nature then. What he
saw was people destroying nature, and he wanted to stop that. That is a problem because wild life
needs to be protected and preserved, not taken away and destroyed. He was a co–founder of the
Sierra Club and he helped create national parks. Muir is often called "The Father of Our National
Parks" or "Citizen of the Universe." He wrote a lot of articles and books that inspired people to be in
nature and enjoy it. One of his quotes from My First Summer in the Sierra is, "When we try to pick
out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the
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John Muir Legacy
To be so free and so adventurous that all the planning one puts into a venture is throwing a some tea
and bread in an old sack and jumping over the back fence and simply going is a feat of human spirit
in itself. This was the type of person John Muir, author of A Thousand–Mile Walk to the Gulf and
renowned environmentalist, was. He lived to be in nature–– to explore and learn everything she had
to offer him, and his passion is evident in all his writings. Throughout his travels and adventures, he
diligently wrote his experiences down and later published them in various forms to spread
awareness and document his findings, including some pictures he took. Muir was a person who was
so truly fascinated and overwhelmed by the pure beauty of nature ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
This legacy included the Sierra Club, a club Muir started and was president of during his life to
bring together people and their efforts to promote conservation, preservation, and environmentalism
within society. The Sierra Club still exists today as an organization that strives "to explore, enjoy,
and protect the wild places of the earth," among other missions such as responsible use of resources
and educating people about improving the human environment ("Policies"). This mission statement
still exemplifies Muir's ideals and beliefs one hundred and twenty–five years after the club's
creation–– a testament to the strength and influence of his actions. However, there is more to Muir's
legacy than the Sierra Club. In 1908, six years before his death in 1914, Congressman William Kent
donated over 150 acres of redwood forest to the government in order to preserve it, insisting it be
named after John Muir ("Muir Woods"). Muir Woods, as it was titled, is a magnificently beautiful
tract of land filled with towering redwoods. The fact that the park still exists more than one hundred
years and Muir's name is still so commonly heard is simply more proof of Muir's lasting legacy
which will undoubtedly continue to inspire and fascinate future generations. Finally, Muir's writings
are the last part of his legacy. He wrote several books about his life and experiences in the Sierra,
and one collection of his adventures to Alaska, but most of his books center on the American West
and the Yosemite Valley. Although he did make some scientific ponderings and conclusions, the vast
majority of Muir's writings centered on his daily experiences and were more descriptive than
anything. According to John Leighly, " Muir's articles intended for the general public are as
carefully written and contain as detailed and accurate observation as any scientific writing...in them
Muir is attempting to share
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John Muir Preservationism
Conserving means to "protect (something, especially an environmentally or culturally important
place or thing) from harm or destruction." John Muir, a famous preservationist is someone I agree
with completely, his idea of preservationism is the best way to help our earth. Not damming Hetch
Hetchy Valley was what really drew me into him. He believed that politicians were using nature as a
way to get material gains. Muir believed that nature should be protected and should be kept
beautiful. He states at one point that "everybody needs beauty as well as bread, places to play in and
pray in where nature may heal and cheer and give strength to body and soul alike." (Who was John
Muir? "The Sierra Club") He's saying that beauty is just as crucial ... Show more content on
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John believed that turning places into national parks would be a great way to conserve them, this
allows for wild life and plants to be monitored and kept under control. With his great love for the
idea of national parks, came a lot of pro's for the environment. Biodiversity plays an important role
in national parks, biodiversity helps to keep environments clean and healthy for wild life. It allows
for climate regulation, pollination and water purification. Yosemite National Park was one of Muir's
creates accomplishments. He first traveled there in 1868 an loved the beauty and scenery so much
that he decided to come back the next year and get a job as a rancher. Soon he became very
concerned about natural landscape preservation. John Muir, being a preservationist, makes him the
most admirable choice because he believed in protecting wild places for the sake of people and the
sake of the well being of the earth. Pinchot, Muir's opposite, believed that conservation went hand in
hand with development and that damming Hetch Hetchy would improve supplies in San Fransisco.
The difference between conservationism and preservationism is that most times conservation
focuses more on the needs of human beings. Preservationism is more focused on maintaining where
the earth is at the time and the areas that are touched by humans. This idea helps to stop the invasion
of human beings taking over open land and making them into farms and industries for
developmental gain. This means that whatever we can preserve now, we can have in the future. A
balance between the two would be difficult because of how strongly these opposing sides feel about
the environment and what should be done in its best interest. I don't feel that a balance is possible
because a lot of times human needs are the reason for natures destruction such as knocking down
forests for paper, and building dams to help increase a water supply. Not only do these human needs
take away
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Wordsworth And John Muir Essay
John Muir and William Wordsworth are great examples of this theory. Throughout their stories, both
men give great insight to how the harmony of nature impacts their lives in a way that can make them
forget about all the sorrow and depression they have following behind them; Wordsworth and Muir's
stories include syntax and diction to verbalize their passionate relationship towards nature. William
Wordsworth's poem, "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud" excellently shows how the power of beauty
can changes one's once depressed, sad day into joy and blissfulness. In Wordsworth's story, he
exploits his experience of how nature changed his mood of depression and sorrow to grateful and
glee when he stumbles across a bed of beautiful golden daffodils dancing in the breeze. Wordsworth
writes: "A poet could not be but gay, in such a jocund company" (stanza 3). In this passage,
Wordsworth shows his change of heart when in the presence of something so beautiful and alluring.
Wordsworth also shows how nature impacts his mood from the quote: "They flash upon the inward
eye, and my heart with pleasure fills" (stanza 4). In this final quote, Wordsworth explains that even
when he is apart from the beautiful golden daffodils, it is the memory that keeps his spirits alive.
While Wordsworth's experience with nature ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Most people in his place would have turned and given up, but it was his passion for nature that kept
him going. In William Wordsworth's story, he wrote about how his sad, depressed mood disappeared
when in the presence of the beautiful daffodils. He was so grateful and overjoyed to see them
dancing in the wind that he kept that memory close, then thinks back to that day when he feels
depressed. Both Wordsworth and Muir have unique relationships towards nature, but it's their shared
love for all the beauty that nature has to offer that makes them one in the same with each
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John Muir Analysis
Image Analysis Images gain their power from the factors and decisions surrounding the site of
production, site of the image, and the site of audiencing (Rose). If an observer takes an image and
considers the effects each of these sites has had on their own reading of the image's meaning, the
viewer's resulting analysis of the image will be more a more complete evaluation. The image of
"Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir at Glacier Point, Yosemite" captures a time and place in such a
way that even a century after the image's creation, students of visual studies can still use it to better
understand how and where an image develops its meaning. The image "Theodore Roosevelt and
John Muir at Glacier Point, Yosemite" features the President and ... Show more content on
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Looking at images like this analytically would be an excellent first step when crafting a research
paper. The image "Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir at Glacier Point, Yosemite" could inspire a
visual studies student to delve into further research on the creation of national parks, the politics
surrounding their establishment or the establishment of Yosemite specifically, or even more specific
research on either Theodore Roosevelt or John Muir. Personally, this image made me more
interested in understanding the use of images to market the national parks in the early twentieth
century and how this has changed with the rise of new technologies in the subsequent decades.
Images like "Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir at Glacier Point, Yosemite" can also be used to
supplement a completed research paper. If one were to write a research paper about the
establishment of the National Park System, the image "Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir at
Glacier Point, Yosemite" would be a good accompaniment. Not only is it informative in its own
right, but it also spurs curiosity in the viewer. Is the image part of a series of photographs of
Roosevelt's travels with Muir? Did the two men like each other or were they just posing together for
posterity? And for the modern environmentalist, the essential question maybe what does this
landscape look like now? The answers to these questions could be answered within the text of the
research paper. It is suspected that the most important images for the research paper will be those
that require additional explanation for full comprehension. This marries the text and images into one
cohesive
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John Muir The Muckraker
The Muckraker John Muir 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
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Compare Roosevelt And John Muir
President Theordore Roosevelt and John Muir went on a camping trip to Yosemite Valley in
1903.Both, Theordore Roosevelt and John Muir went together they both had the same goal to
preserve nature.They also went together because, John Muir was the only person that President
Roosevelt would go with. In source one it is about, how President Theordore Roosevelt and John
Muir go to the Yosemite valley together because, "that is the only person that Roosevelt will go
with". Roosevelt said, "What are we supposed to do when all of are forest are gone because, of all
these people that are destroying them".In passage 1, it states " In 1890, the government formed
Yosemite National Park, but the new park did not include Yosemite Valley".In this passage, it is very
important for Roosevelt and John to save the red wood trees because that is both of there goals in
life and they decided to do it together.In the middle of the passage, it talks about how were they
traveled to and how they got there and things like that.Next, At the end of the story it talks about
what they ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Secondly,The only birds he noticed or cared for were some that were very conspicuous, such as the
water–ouzels always particular favorites of mine too"In this passage,it talks about how someone
talked Roosevelt into going to camp with him.According to Roosevelt. , it talks about how they
camped in a snowstorm that night.In conclusion,the passage is about how they got to the place and
what the nights were like the two days he
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John Muir Biography
"The clearest way into the Universe is through a forest wilderness." (Wood, Harold. "John Muir: A
Brief Biography." John Muir Biography – John Muir Exhibit,
vault.sierraclub.org/john_muir_exhibit/life/muir_biography.aspx. Accessed 22 May 2017.) This
quote is one of John Muir's most famous quotes. In this quote, John Muir is expressing his view on
the world. John Muir always loved nature, he was a naturalist ever since he was a young child. John
Muir grew up on a farm where he was surrounded by plants. Whenever he would do the farm work
he would observe the plants, stare at them, and learn from them
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Muir ). John Muir had many siblings. With one of his brothers,
he used to run around the field and just have ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
When John Muir was concerned about preserving nature nobody else really cared, because back
then it was viewed as "not such a big deal." ("John Muir." National Parks Service, U.S. Department
of the Interior, www.nps.gov/yose/learn/historyculture/muir.htm. Accessed 22 May 2017.) But to
Muir it was. When someone would cut down a tree he would become devastated because he thought
that nature had feelings too. He believed that it hurt the earth when someone would "rip apart the
forest and parks." ("About the Sierra Club." Sierra Club, 12 May 2017, www.sierraclub.org/about.
Accessed 22 May 2017.) He believed that wildlife needs to be preserved because it is so beautiful.
He was hurt that so many people didn't care and would just rip it apart and knew that he could
change something about it. It is like watching somebody ruin something you love so much and you
have to watch and know about it but not take action, but John Muir took action and tried to avoid
letting anybody harm the beloved plants. ("About the Sierra Club." Sierra Club, 12 May 2017,
www.sierraclub.org/about. Accessed 22 May 2017.) He was able to do that when he made the area a
National Park. When Theodore Roosevelt realized how beautiful nature was, he wanted to help any
way possible. Roosevelt did this by making a law that any park declared a national park cannot be
hurt or taken down by the government in anyway shape or form. Most parks that are already
national
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Sierra Club Case Study
Being a part of an interest group is about being apart of something that is bigger than just one
person. It's advocating for change, for everyone. The Sierra Club is no different. This environmental
organization does more than just exist, it makes a difference.
The Sierra Club is a public interest organization that was founded on May 28, 1892 by the Scottish–
American preservationist, naturalist, and philosopher John Muir. He was, not surprisingly, the
organization's first president. His work focused mostly on his excursions and observations in the
Sierra Nevada mountain range, hence the name. Prior to creating the Sierra Club in honor of the
Sierra mountain range, John Muir helped to successfully campaign for a bigger park for the
Yosemite ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
It is "the nation's largest and most influential grassroots environmental organization," according to
its official website. The 2.4 million members and supporters have helped to successfully pass the
Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, and the Endangered Species Act. Besides lobbying politicians, the
club organizes over 20,000 local and international outdoor activities such as hiking or rock climbing
to experience what it's all about. The organization has also helped to create 431 different parks and
monuments and also advocated for and was successful in the protection of approximately 250
million acres of land.
The group attracts members from all over the world. Individuals who choose to be apart of the
Sierra Club are individuals who are environmentally conscious, and want to make a difference in the
environment. They are tree–huggers, nature lovers, and environmentalists. Recently, the
organization has advocated to get rid of fossil fuels in favor of moving toward "a clean energy
economy." Their progress on achieving this is demonstrated through statistics, the organization has
helped to retire approximately 200 coal plants. They are currently also addressing climate change,
and also fracking and tar
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The California Water Crisis And The Fight For Conservation
Ever since the early nineteenth century until today, the California water crisis has been an issue that
is yet to be resolved. As one of the largest states with a population of over thirty million (Class
Discussion); water consumption is in high demand. "From the very beginning, California was a state
with tremendous agricultural potential"(Chan, S., and Olin, S. Pg 136). A similarity from both the
California of the early 1800 's and today is that water is an expensive and important resource being
sourced primarily from the Sierra Nevada Mountains. The difference between then and now is that
previously we had an abundant water supply but we did not know how to utilize it effectively to
meet demand. Contrast that situation to today, and the demand for water remains, however the
supply is no longer available to meet the needs of Californians. In this paper, we will discuss the
legislative decision 's to bring California's water supply to its people, the fight for conservation, and
discuss the drought as it is today.
During the early 1800s and 1900s the legislation passed involving water was regarding how it could
be brought to the people. In 1886, Lux vs Haggin established the "California Doctrine"(Sucheng, C.,
and Olin, S. Pg 138). This ruled that any corporation or person to whom was brought water by an
agent of the state would be charged a fee and need to comply with all rules and regulations. The
main reason for the written law was to "provide a mode by which the state,
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John Muir: Preserving Nature
In 1903, President Roosevelt went on a camping trip to Yosemite Valley, and with a famous
outdoorsman John Muir. Consequent to the trip, their purpose was to preserve the Yellowstone
National Park, and other parks, so that the forest could be around for many more years to come.
Moreover, John Muir has often tried to persuade people to preserve the area and to keep Yosemite's
valley beauty shining, conversely that was not an easy task. Preserving nature is bigger than it
seems, though it may seem like an ancient place that is just a tourist attraction. There is much more
to it, around 400 species live in that area, and it needs to be protected from thieves and lumberman
who could destroy the area. According to Passage One, paragraph 5,
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Analysis Of John Muir
Feelings of security, happiness, are invoked when I think of nature. Nature is kind, healing, and
relaxing. John Muir captured the essence of these characteristics while conveying these exact
thoughts. Furthermore, Muir expresses the freedom mountaineers have while climbing as they are
cradled in the quiet peace of nature. Muir believes that anyone can regain their sense of freedom and
find inner peace by being out in nature and exploring it. In fact, Muir indirectly suggests that if the
world kept in touch with the wild places around them, it would resolve many issues and stressors
that plague humanity today. If people, myself included, spent more time outside and in nature, it
would leave them and myself feeling refreshed, relaxed, and
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John Muir vs. Gifford Pinchot
Have you ever heard of John Muir and Gifford Pinchot? These two men expressed different beliefs
over preservation and conservation. John Muir was America's most famous conservationist. While
Gifford Pinchot was one of America's leading preservationist. Both of these men spent most of their
lifetime defending the natural resources and the wildlife around the world. John Muir is one of
California's most important historical personalities. Born in Scotland, he has been called "The Father
of our National Parks," "Wilderness Profit," and "Citizen of the Universe." As a wilderness explorer,
his exciting adventures in the Sierra Nevada and Alaska's glaciers led him searching for nature's
beauty. Gifford Pinchot was born to a wealthy family on ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
Roosevelt's successor, President Taft, did not really care for government ownership of land. This is
what divided Roosevelt and Taft and led to the creation of the Progressive Party. Pinchot ran for the
United States Senate but did not win. He then changed from national to State politics. His goal was
governorship. This is where he believed he would have the greatest opportunity
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Progressivism During The Progressive Era
The Progressive Era was a period of social activism and political reform that grew from the 1890s to
the 1920s. Social reformers and journalists, like Jane Addams, Jacob Riis, and Ida Tarbell were
some of the powerful voices for progressivism. "They concentrated on exposing the evils of
corporate greed, combating fear of immigrants, and urging Americans to think hard about what
democracy meant." Many progressive reformers wanted to end corruption in the government,
regulate business practices, address health hazards, and improve working conditions. It was also an
era of conservationists. Conservationists are people who protect and preserve the environment and
wildlife. Throughout the Progressive Era, there were many conservationists who wrote and
described nature, but the most well–known figure in conservation was John Muir. John Muir worked
to protect Earth's beauty by traveling and exploring nature, co–founding the Sierra Club, and by
influencing others through his writings and by showing some of the most important people how the
wildlife was magnificent. 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
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John Muir: United States Forest Conservation Movement
John Muir was a native of Scotland; however, he was an American naturalist at heart. As an author,
explorer, and naturalist, Muir was an important character in the United States forest conservation
movement in the late 1800's and early 1900's. Through his endeavors, many national parks were
established and preserved for generations to come.
John Muir was born on April 21, 1838 in Dunbar, Scotland. In 1849, he and his family moved to
Wisconsin where they started a farm. Muir later described this part of his life in his autobiography,
The Story of My Boyhood and Youth, 1913 ("Frequently"). As a boy, Muir read every book he could
find, a self–education that enabled him to enroll in the University of Wisconsin in 1860. Three years
later, he left school without receiving a degree because he disliked abiding by a fixed curriculum.
When Muir was a young man he took on small jobs to support himself as he adventured throughout
the United States. In 1867, while working at an Indianapolis carriage shop, Muir injured his eye
causing a temporary blindness that would change his life.
After one month, Muir regained his sight and determined to turn his eyes to the nature, to forget
mechanical inventions and devote himself instead to "the study of the inventions of God"
(McGuire). He traveled by foot from Indianapolis to the Gulf of Mexico, recording his observations
... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
His almost–spiritual descriptions of nature inspired influential and common people alike. Muir's
articles in the Century Magazine picked up him the consideration and companionship of its similarly
invested manager, Robert Underwood Johnson. Their consolidated endeavors prompted a
demonstration of Congress that made Yosemite National Park in 1890. Muir and Johnson were along
these lines associated with advance preservation acts that brought about the security of Sequoia,
Mount Rainier and Petrified Forest, and Grand Canyon National
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Similarities Between John Muir And Roosevelt
Have you ever been to a national park? Many of those parks took a lengthy time to be preserved
under government control and people had to fight to preserve them. Take Yosemite National Park for
instance, John Muir had devoted 30 years of his life to that park. John worked fairly close with
President Roosevelt on his life's work. Muir and Roosevelt had a shared objective to preserve
Yosemite because they both admire nature, they both continuously fought for Yosemite's
preservation and they both spent an enduring amount of time on it. First of all they both clearly
admire nature because when passage 1 says "The president deeply loved the outdoors and had a
great understanding of nature." This tells that the president loved nature, and that he understood
what was going on and reasons why it needed to be protected not just because it is beautiful but for
nature reasons such as how the trees in Yosemite are native to Yosemite so if they were not
preserved than they could face obsolescence .In ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
For example, when the article says " Just days after his camping trip, Roosevelt gave a passionate
speech urging forest preservation.'' this gives a look on how passionate the president was about
preserving Yosemite after his trip. He urged preservation, he didn't want the beauty of the park to go
to waste because people believe, ''the country is too big to be used up". Then again, when John said
"Any fool can destroy trees, but only Uncle Sam can save them." He wanted to tell people that the
government needs to protect the forests because without trees we would all die. He knew that
without them there would be nothing so they must save them before it's too late. But, there already
was a Yosemite National Park but it didn't include Yosemite Valley and John Muir still fought to
protect the whole park instead of just protecting the
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John Muir's Appreciation Of Nature
John Muir was an author, explorer and a lover of nature and wants to expand the people's
appreciation of nature. As a young man, he would explore and write. These two things carried on
throughout his life. He has made many contributions to help people with their appreciation of
nature. John Muir was well remembered and respected for the things he has accomplished.
Born in Dunbar, Scotland, John Muir moved to U.S. with his family in 1849. They moved to a farm
in Wisconsin. At the University of Wisconsin, Muir studied geology and botany. Muir then received
a job at Yosemite Valley, and came across a spiritual connection with nature. In addition to that
connection, he had created a goal.
John Muir was an early advocate for the idea of national
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Summary Of My First Summer In The Sierra By John Muir
I have never read this book before but in my environmental ethics (environment 243) class this book
was brought up a lot in lecture. It somewhat reminds me of Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the
Human Place in Nature by William Cronon or My First Summer in the Sierra by John Muir. Leopold
wrote so beautifully and views the world in such a more elaborate way than I do, a way I hope to
one day achieve. One of my favorite analogies is under January Thaw where he talks about an owl
circling around a bloody spot with tufts of rabbit hair. To me I would just think that the owl got a kill
and keep moving but Leopold sees it in both the owl and rabbits point of view. He says "To this
rabbit the thaw brought freedom from want, but also reckless abandonment ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
It is something I have learned about in class but I like Leopold's perspective of it. This is when he
shot a wolf and watched the fire in her eyes die. Back then it was very okay to shoot wolves because
they were only looked at negatively, and the same thing is happening to this very day. After shooting
the wolf he looked in her eyes right before she died and said "there was something new to me in
those eyes–something known only to her and the mountain". He shot her because fewer wolves
meant more deer which is desirable for hunters. But he then realized how everything on that
mountain connected, and that more deer meant the mountain would be browsed to death. More deer
means less vegetation on the mountain meaning a less diverse ecosystem and less native plants,
which we learned about in class that those are very important. Under Thinking Like a Mountain, "I
now suspect that just as a deer herd lives in mortal fear of its wolves, so does a mountain live in
mortal fear of its deer". He sees the interconnectedness of relationships to the mountain back in the
early 1900's and I am taught about it in classes to this day because he is realizing the different
trophic levels and how they are all
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John Muir: The Hero Of Yosemite
John Muir of many names, the Wilderness Prophet, Citizen of the Universe, the Father of Our
National Parks, was one of the mountain's most valued American Scots. The founder of the Sierra
Club did everything within his power to "make the mountains glad," ("The John Muir Exhibit").
With the president at his side and his convincing journalism, John Muir became the hero of
Yosemite, and a preservationist symbol to Americans, as well activists everywhere. He is a hero
because he took a stand for what was important to him. The year was 1903, Theodore Roosevelt,
whom most would've assumed to be arriving near Yosemite to meet with other politicians, or maybe
sign some documentations, or whatever business democrats would tend to, had just arrived
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Pros And Cons Of John Muir
John Muir is best known for his efforts to preserve the wilderness of the United States, which
greatly contributed to the preservation of countless natural areas of the US through the National
Parks Service. During his travels across the country and abroad, Muir recorded his thoughts and
beliefs about nature and the fundamental connection people share with the earth. By voyaging into
the wild and shedding the restraints and ideals of modern society, Muir argues that people can
expand their understanding of the world and experience life to its full potential through immersing
themselves in nature. First and foremost a researcher of the environment, Muir believed that by
spending time in nature, he could more deeply understand the earth and all of the knowledge it has
to offer. During one of his numerous expeditions in the Yosemite Valley in 1869, Muir remarks that
"...these lawless wanderings will be valuable as suggestive beginnings... if I should return to the
awkward rules & laws of civilization & be buried as a strand into the thick of society." He knows
that if he returns to civilization, his excursions will be no more than beginnings of research that will
serve no real purpose. He further comments that, "These sweet free roamings be as little chinks &
seams on life's horizon whence I may obtain narrow glimpses of the treasures of the Kingdoms of
Nature beyond." Just as the horizon blocks out sunlight, Muir argues that civilization blocks out the
opportunity to discover
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John Muir Research Paper
The early leader that I choose to write about for this paper is John Muir. John Muir was born on
April 21, 1838 in Dunbar, Scotland. John Muir has been credited with a lot of great things that have
benefited the parks and recreation movement. The contributions that he founded back then are still
being felt around the world today. At first John Muir, has been credited as the found of the National
Parks System. So, if Muir has been credited for that discovery then we can thank him for all the
beautiful national parks system. Without John Muir, we might not have places such as Yosemite
National Park, or the Grand Canyon. Beyond that John Muir, and several of his followers also came
up with the invention of the Sierra Club. The goal of the Sierra ... Show more content on
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I consider him to be a leader, because he could take charge of a group of people, and make them
follow through with what goals he was teaching them about. He had many qualities that made him
such a good leader. The first quality that he possessed was that he was very good on the social
aspect of the leadership scale. He had to be a good on the social end, and based on that he was one
of the best coaches I had due to his social factor was great to get through to his players. Before other
coaches that I had wouldn't be able to get through to all the players, because they lacked the
communications skills to get through to every player. After that, he had a plan, but if the team wasn't
doing something right he would make us stay on that activity until we did it right which mean he
could handle situations in the best way possible even if it would screw up the plan for the
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John Muir 's Influence On American History
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 ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Muir believed that the stunning beauty of the Yosemite valley deserved to be protected so that
people from all around the world could view. From the first time Muir saw the Sierra Nevadas he
regarded them very highly, "a landscape was displayed that after all my wanderings still appears as
the most beautiful I have ever beheld. At my feet lay the Great Central Valley of California" (Muir
2). Muir goes further in detail as to why it was the most beautiful sight he had ever seen, "Along the
top and extending a good way down, was a rich pearl–gray belt of snow; below it a belt of blue and
dark purple, marking the extension of the forests... from the blue sky to the yellow valley smoothly
blending as they do in a rainbow, making a wall of light ineffably fine. Then it seemed to me that the
Sierra should be called, not the Nevada or Snowy Range, but the Range of Light" (Muir 2 and 3).
This beauty that Muir describes in his book The Yosemite was one of the major contributors to his
founding of the Yosemite valley as a national park (Muir 1–3).
Turner 3
The biggest focal point of John Muir's attraction towards the Yosemite valley was the wide variety
of flowers and trees, and he believed that these should be protected. Muir felt very strongly about
the importance of the trees and in particular one, "The most influential of the Valley trees is the
yellow
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John Muir: Founder Of The Sierra Club
"Wander a whole summer if you can. Time will not be taken from the sum of life. Instead of
shortening, it will definitely lengthen it and make you truly immortal." ––John Muir John Muir,
founder of the Sierra Club, is well known as one of the nation's greatest environmentalists and
conservationists. Muir spent many years of his life wandering around in the hills of Northern
California, experiencing a phenomenon that can only be described as wanderlust. The term
wanderlust describes an innate feeling or desire to travel. Just a few short weeks ago, I packed my
bag and hopped on a plane bound for Spain, in an attempt to rekindle my own wanderlust. Growing
up, I was extremely lucky to have a family that believed in traveling all over the country ... Show
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While no trip to any country is complete without sampling the regional food, the Camino allowed us
to sample the local fare from a new town every single day. I thought this was such a fantastic aspect
of the trip because it forced all of us to try various items and not simply eat the same old thing every
day. Nearly every cafè along the Camino served a pilgrim's dinner, which consisted of two entrees,
bread, water and a dessert, which ends up being a substantial amount of food by the time all is said
and done. The pilgrim's dinner varied greatly in quality, but not so much in menu choices, as many
of the restaurants offered similar options. Towards the end of our Camino, we began to stray from
the pilgrim's dinners and indulge in tapas, or small plates, which allowed us to sample everything
from tortadas to octopus, However, one option that was never offered along the entire Camino
adventure was free water at the dinner table. While water could be found in random locations
scattered along the trail, the idea of filling up water glasses at the table with water from a faucet was
totally foreign to the Spanish. When a group asks for water, the waiter brings bottled water to the
table, which runs up the table's tab pretty quickly. Around the dinner table was also the location
where I began to notice a striking difference between American and Spanish culture. Every time I
was sitting at the table, listening to all the members of my group speaking so loudly you could hear
them from across the room, I looked around at other patrons of the restaurant and noticed they
weren't speaking nearly as loud. In fact, you could hardly hear any of them at all. After noticing this
phenomenon the first few times, I began to realize exactly why Americans are often times perceived
as being loud, rowdy and sort of obnoxious; and
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John Muir Research Paper
A man named John Muir was born on April 21, 1838 in Dunbar, Scotland. In 1849, at the age of 11,
Muir and his family emigrated to Portage, Wisconsin. Growing up, Muir and his brother would roam
the fields and the woods of the rich Wisconsin countryside (Sierra Club 2015). In 1867, while John
Muir was working in a carriage parts shop, he suffered a blinding eye injury. After Muir recovered,
he decided that he would leave work and go study nature. In 1868, he visited California and that
became his home. Muir was fascinated by California's Sierra Nevada and the Yosemite. He was
hired as a shepherd's assistant in Yosemite Valley. John Muir wrote a series of articles called the
"Studies in the Sierra" and this launched his successful career as ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
The city of San Francisco proposed building a dam in Hetch Hetchy, a glacier carved valley at the
time, to produce a steady water supply. The Valley was in Yosemite National Park and it was
protected by the federal government. It was then up to the Congress to decide the survival of the
valley. Conservationists believed that the environment should be used in a industrious manner to
benefit the people, while the preservationist believed that nature should be preserved and saved from
human destruction. Hundred of organizations and individuals submitted petitions to Congress about
the valley. Congress eventually passed legislation that allowed the formation of the dam. This defeat
helped transform the Sierra Club from a politically naive hiking club into a formidable and
politically astute environmental organization (Snell
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John Muir's Argument For The Preservation Of The Yosemite...
Fifteen miles south of the world–renowned Yosemite Valley sits the Hetch Hetchy Valley with its
water roaring. Hard to believe, the desolate valley was once recognized as the exact counterpart of
the Yosemite Valley for its natural beauty– cascading waterfalls, lofty mountain cliffs, and serene
rivers. John Muir, an ardent advocate for the preservation of the wilderness, described the
experience of visiting Hetch Hetchy to be a sheer pleasure: "it [was] a bright day in June; the air
[was] drowsy with flies; the pines [swayed] dreamily, and you [were] sunk, shoulder–deep, in
grasses and flowers." He devoted himself into campaigning for its integrity when the San Francisco
city government proposed to dam the valley for municipal water supply ... Show more content on
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It also threatened the future of other national parks because it set up a precedent for appropriating
protected natural resources to utilitarian uses. Strengthened by his personal attachment to the Hetch
Hetchy Valley, he appealed to the public sentiments and eloquently criticized the shortsighted
"exploiters" like mayor Phelan in various forms of writings including books and newspaper articles.
In addition, John Muir took on political actions in this battle, gathering national support for his
position. He traveled to New York and Washington D.C. to give speeches and meet with the
secretary of the interior, Democratic leaders, and speaker of the house. He also innovated
"grassroots lobbying", a means to persuade elected officials of his position by urging individual
citizens to express their support of him with letters to
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How Did John Muir Conserve Nature
John Muir lived on this earth from April 21, 1838 to December 24, 1914. For as long as he lived,
Muir devoted himself to the environment. Muir was so dedicated to nature and protecting the
wilderness, that he is known as the Father of National Parks. Muir was an advocate for the
preservation and conservation of forests and natural resources. He constantly urged that nature
should be under the protection of the federal government. He created the Sierra Club that worked to
protect the environment. Muir wrote numerous articles and books about nature and the conservation
of it. It was important to him that there were places in the wilderness that were safeguarded in their
entirety and it is of the utmost importance that we continue John Muir's works. We only have one
earth, so we need to do everything we can to preserve it. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
First and foremost, "God was more easily found in nature than in works of man." This quote really
resonated with me. In the The National Parks: America's Best Idea video, it talked about Muir
finding a stronger faith with God out in the wilderness than he could in any church. Being a
religious person myself, I really do find these quotes to be true. When you submerge yourself into
the beauty of nature, I feel you really find yourself inspired and in awe of God's creations. Another
reason I chose Muir is for all the work he's done to aid in the creation of National and State Parks.
My family of six never really has the time or money to ever go on vacation, so when we do, we
always go to National and State Parks, wildlife refuges, historical places, and other things of that
nature. Most of my favorite memories of my family are essentially because of Muir. Without the
founding of these places I'm afraid we would all be so absorbed in ourselves and in technological
advances. That we would miss the true beauty that's right outside. From what I've watched and read,
he just seems like a guy I'd get along
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Comparing John Muir And Theodore Roosevelt's Camping Trip...
John Muir and Theodore Roosevelt went on a camping trip in Yosemite Valley. They went in March
of 1903. They planned a camping trip because they planned to preserve nature in Yosemite Valley.
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. When Roosevelt went to california
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President Roosevelt's National Parks And Preservation...
As President Mckinley condition stabilized, post being shot, Vice–President Theodore Roosevelt
embarked to view the vastness of nature in the less developed west. His trip was cut short, as he got
word that Mckinley's condition had turned for the worse. Mckinley was pronounced dead September
14, 1901; subsequently, Roosevelt was sworn into the presidency, along with his progressive views.
Although this was not the start of the conservation and preservation movements, extended from the
late 19th through the early 20th century, it was a major step for the movement as Roosevelt had
empathy for activists and nature. The combination of a movement and a president who was willing
to move resulted in five national parks and 18 national monuments being established by the end of
Roosevelt's presidency. After the establishment of these parks, the lands were to be preserved by
federal government, but the political and economical agendas of those opposed to the conservation
and preservation movements still endangered the pristine land. The fact that it took a president to get
assassinated, before any serious legislative help came to aid the conservation and preservation
movements. If the movement came in a more populated group, which could agree on how save the
environment around us, then it wouldn't have taken this mishap to get the ball rolling. The battle for
Hetch Hetchy highlighted the different views within the movement, all in favor of environmental
protection. Years later
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John Muir: His Achievements Essay
John Muir: His Achievements/Journeys
John Muir worked at a factory in Canada. He invented time and money saving machines for the
factories. But one day an accident changed his whole outlook on life. As he was tightening a
machine belt with a file, the file flew out and pierced his right eye. His left eye grew dim to the
reaction.
John's friends and neighbors tried to help him and brought doctors.
Some friends read to him. Children brought him flowers and listened to his stories. He finally began
to regain his sight. His employer, grateful for the work that he had done for his company, offered
John a job as foreman and a future partnership. But John gave up the chance to be a ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
In the next ten years of visit to Alaska, Muir would track glaciers and observe them.
John Muir will spend the rest of his life writing books about nature and speak out for nature. He will
suffer the lost of his wife and abate his grief by observing a pertrified forest. John Muir really was a
man of the mountains.
I believe that John Muir was a very hard working and determined man.
The fact that he overcomes the struggles of his life to accomplish all that he did makes him an even
more remarkable man. I think that it is great that there is a man that would speak out for such a
wonderful thing like nature in a time where people didn't care. He has accomplished so much in his
life that I am surprised that he is not as well–known. He should be written about and taught about
more. John Muir can inspire a person to care more for nature and become more considerate and
passionate to it.
CHILDHOOD
John Muir was born in Dunbar, Scotland, on April 21, 1838. He had two older sisters named
Margaret and Sarah and two younger brothers named David and
Daniel, Jr. and twin sisters named Mary and Annie. They were all born in Dunbar except a younger
sister, Joanna, that was born after they moved to the United
States. John's father was Daniel Muir and John's mother was Ann Gilrye Muir.
Daniel was a man of strong feelings. His religious
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John Muir Research Paper
Ever since John Muir's childhood, he always loved nature. Muir was born April 21, 1838 in
beautiful rural Scotland. He loved to escape out into the Scottish wilderness and explore its
unknown beauty. Even when he moved to America at age 11, he continued to sneak away from
home to explore the wilderness of Wisconsin. But Muir was more than just a man of nature, he was
a man of science. He attended the university of Wisconsin, but dropped out; not because of his
grades, but because he took the classes he wanted and not the required ones. Muir was an avid
inventor, submitting many of his creations to the state fair. Muir once created a "wondrous device
that tipped him out of bed before dawn"(Wood 2015). Muir later moved to montreal, Canada to ...
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But what was more extraordinary was what he did, not who he was. Muir established the first
national parks, protected and created new ones, raised awareness about nature and the importance of
conservation, and created one of the world's leading conservationist's organization ("Sierra Club"
2017). He did all of this through his writings, leadership, and diplomacy. In addition to what he did
during his life, Muir also left a legacy that continues to inspire and educate thousands about nature.
The revolutionary books Muir wrote over a hundred years ago are still in print today. Hundreds of
places are named after Muir, such as the John Muir lodge in King's Canyon national park, or Muir
peak in L.A. (Wood 2017). The Sierra Club still prospers to this day, working hard to preserve our
national parks and the environment for future generations. America celebrates the man who took a
stand for the environment every April 21, John Muir day, for everything he has done for the country.
A writer, a leader, and a diplomat, Muir took a stand for our environment. America will forever be
grateful to John Muir, the Father of our National
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John Muir: Ancestor, Pioneer, And Writer
John Muir was a farmer, inventor, sheepherder, explorer, and writer. Without him lots of places we
love, like Yosemite and many more, would not be here today. John Muir was born was born on April
21st in 1838 in Dunbar, Scotland. He was the third of his parents eight children. John's father was
religious and very harsh. He forced John and his siblings to work in the fields. Their father also did
not let them read books at a young age, so he found a way. He was interested in inventing, so he
built a bed that would tilt at a steep angle causing him to slip out of bed. This was one of John's
earliest inventions. His family moved to America when he was about eleven.
John ran away from his family to get away from his father. He went to exhibit his inventions at the
State Agriculture Fair in Madison. In the year 1861, he attended the university of Wisconsin for two
and a half years. He taught a public school during the winter of 1861. While he was at school he
invented a study desk that retrieves a book, holds it in place for the prescribed period of time, and
then it automatically replaces it with another book. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Botany is the study of plants. A year later he took his first botanical foot journey along the
Wisconsin River to the Mississippi. Two years later in 1864 at the age of 26, he traveled to Canada
and stayed there for about two years. He tried to save a part of Fountain Lake farm because that was
the first place his family settled down. He ended up being a major contributor to the formation of the
national park
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The National Park Is One Of The Most Well Known National...
Yosemite National Park is one of the most well known national parks in the United States. It is
especially famous for its beautifully inspiring scenery. Yosemite expands 748,542 acres and is
located on the western slope of the Sierra Nevada. The elevation of the park ranges from 2,127 to
13,114 feet (Bortman, p. 1546). The closest town is Mariposa with neighboring counties including
Madera and Fresno. Today, 3.5 million people visit Yosemite annually ("History & Culture –
Yosemite National Park (U.S. National Park Service)"). With the attraction of millions of tourists,
the national park has been designated inalienable for all time. The creation of Yosemite dates back to
the Precambrian era. The region of what is now Yosemite sat between two continents. The Farallon
Plate subducted under the North American Plate and created an arc of volcanoes during the
Devonian and Permian periods (Harris, p. 328). The solidification of magma created igneous rock
during the Triassic period and in through the Jurassic. On the eastern side of present day Yosemite,
the Nevadan mountain range was also forming. The Sierra Nevada Mountains are constructed of
granite (Harris, p. 337). The creation of Yosemite Valley was by glaciation. The formation of
glaciers and the process of being covered by these ice sheets began approximately 3 million years
ago (Harris, p. 339). According to Harris, at least four of these glaciations have occurred (p. 339).
The first glaciation, called the Sherwin, was
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John Muir And Pinchot Analysis
Both John Muir and Gifford Pinchot aimed to protect North American wilderness due to unregulated
land development but form different perspectives. John Muir is one of the key figure to promote the
idea of preservation. (Bulkan J., 2016) In his understanding wilderness offers people an opportunity
to revisit and experience nature away from busy city lives. (Difference Between Conservation and
Preservation., 2011) The purpose of preservation is to restore wilderness by advocating federal
national protection. For example, the formation of the first American national park – Yosemite
National Park in 1864. The way it works is to have a place without any human activities to further
disturb the ecosystem. He believes in anthropocentric view which means that nature ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
However, indigenous people lose their traditional territory because of the restrict rules. They were
no longer allowed to live in that land. Different from John Muir, Pinchot embraced the idea of
conservation which is a mechanism for wise and sustainable management of natural resources for
economical purpose. (Bulkan J., 2016) He mainly focused on timber production and protection of
water resources. (Bulkan J., 2016) However, he believed human should use resources in a way that
provide the greatest good to the greatest number for the longest time. Therefore, it is more
sustainable for the future generation. Form my perspective, Pinchot was more anthropocentric than
Muir. Because he did not claim protection and deny nature has its own inherent value. Pinchot has
three principles when it comes to conservation: conservation for sustainable development, efficiency
and equity. (Bulkan J., 2016) Conservation in some other words stands for development. Form my
perspective, Pinchot was more anthropocentric than Muir. Because he did not claim protection and
deny nature has its own inherent
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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I Wandered Lonely As A Cloud By John Muir Analysis

  • 1. I Wandered Lonely As A Cloud By John Muir Analysis In John Muir's essay "The Calypso Borealis" he shows his love for flowers when he said "it seems so wonderful that so frail and lovely a plant has much power over human hearts." William Wordsworth also shows his love towards nature when he wrote his poem "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud," he shows the joy he finds in nature when he said "ten thousand saw I at a glance, tossing their heads in a sprightly dance." Both John Muir and William Wordsworth find happiness and joy in nature, but express it in different way. Muir and Wordsworth had to go through the worst to discover the beauty of nature. Throughout both John Muir and William Wordsworth exciting adventure, they experienced two totally different aspects with nature. In the first place, Muir ran into some of the toughest obstacles, it was not until the end that he realized it was all worth it. Muir described the flower as "the rarest ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Through some of his toughest times he was out there seeking adventure. "I wandered lonely as a cloud that floats on high o'er vales and hills, when all at once I saw a crowd, a host of golden daffodils." Before Wordsworth saw the field of daffodils he was lonely and depressed. But with the beauty of nature it helped to transform his mood for the better. "For oft, when on my couch I lie in vacant or in pensive mood, they flash upon my inward eye." "And then my heart with pleasure fills, and dances with the daffodils." Furthermore, When Wordsworth is alone lying on his sofa, a feeling of bored and sadness rush over him. But when the daffodils come to his mind he is able to imagine his adventure with them, and that brings him joy and happiness. Both Wordsworth and Muir show their love for nature by writing about their adventure. Through their journey they discovered how the beauty of nature really does impact one's life for the better. How does the beauty of nature impact ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. Muir Woods Research Paper Muir Woods National Monument is located in Marin County, about 15 miles away from San Francisco. Muir Woods contains a large portion of Redwood Canyon and is near the base of Mount Tamalpais. The park was established in 1907 when William Kent, a California congressman and philanthropist, gifted 298 acres of costal redwoods to the federal government in attempt to preserve the area from development. The now historic redwoods were the target of the North Coast Water Company who planned to build a new reservoir. A year later on January 9th, President Theodore Roosevelt signed the proclamation establishing Muir Woods as a National Monument (Dilsaver, 294). Under the Antiquities Act of 1906 Roosevelt proclaimed this area to be of "extraordinary scientific ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The natural habitats of these birds being the redwoods allows them an abundant food supply, from insects to a variety of flowering plants. The sustainability of these species of birds depends on the conservation of Muir Woods. Dilsaver, Lary. "Preservation Choices at Muir Woods." Geographical Review, vol. 84, no. 3, 1994, pp. 290–305. The content of the source above includes historical information about the establishment of Muir Woods National Monument. Furthermore, this source includes information of preservation efforts at the park since the 1980's, starting with the release of a National Park survey that categorized threats to national parks, including Muir Woods, into three categories, biological, visitor capacity, and purpose of the area. This source provides insight to solutions to these problems, and the successful outcomes the National Park Service was able to implement. Pilcher, Ericka, et al. "Understanding and Managing Experiential Aspects of Soundscapes at Muir Woods National Monument." Environmental Management, vol. 43, no. 3, 2009, pp. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. John Muir Research Paper John Muir is a Scottish–born American farmer, traveler, writer, and advocator. He was born on April 21, 1838, in Dunbar, Scotland and died on December 24, 1914, in Los Angeles, California (Britannica, Introduction). He is recognized as one of the most influent modern humanist and naturalist of the history of the United States. Even if he is known and acknowledged by many, this historical peace seeker deserves more credit. He is not recognized enough for all of his positive contributions to the United States' environment. He played a major role in the protection of nature. Analyzing his accomplishments will strongly help to grant him the credit he really deserves and help to associate him better with his realizations. What were John Muir's contributions ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In 1906, he was named the first president of a newly formed group called the Sierra Club. He also was one of its creators. John Muir saw the Sierra Club as ''the crystallization of his dreams and the labor of a lifetime'' (Fox 107). In other words, for him, being the president of this organization was finally the voice he needed for his sayings to really have impacts on the society. For once, his ideas could have big impacts on the global population's behavior. Muir's main role in the Sierra Club was to write important letters and mobilize the groups (Fox 114). His hard work with this organization was quickly rewarded. Only a couple of months after its creation, the club was composed of 175 members and already had a real influence on the government policies in the United States (Fox 107). In the beginning, the Sierra Club concentrated its work on the creation of national parks and on mountaineering matters (Fox 160). After a while, the Sierra Club was also recognized for its promotion of a responsible use of the ecosystem, a sustainable use of the planet's resources and a better education of the population in the subject of protecting and restoring nature (Worster 466). It was and still is, engaged in an eternal fight. The Sierra Club is considered as one of the first grassroots organization related to the environment in the world and it is still an ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. Human Dominion and Separation from Nature Other than Native American works, most of the works read for the class seemed to stem from or at least were influenced by some vein of Christian thinking. This can't be helped because the western world has been influenced by Christianity for centuries, and the foundational values still recognized in this country in particular are protestant, even if they're not blatantly proclaiming the faith. In fact, we even read through a few chapters of the Bible because the common theme and justification of "human dominion over nature" stems from the primary story of the Bible in Genesis. This theme is often a subject of great sadness or annoyance for nature writers like Wordsworth and Mary Oliver; while authors like John Muir and Bill McKibben, whom do profess to the Christian faith, still see nature as something spiritual because "dominion" means not just given authority, but also given the responsibility for its protection. The first chapter of Genesis establishes humanity's place in God's creation. Verse 26 in particular; "Then God said, "Let us make humankind in our image, according to our likeness; and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea...and over every creeping thing that creeps upon the earth."" The entire verse basically gives human authority over every genus on the planet, putting us at the top of the food chain as it were (though in the Garden humans were forbade to eat meat). A lot of people seem to see this verse as one of the causes of the human superiority ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. History Of Conservation And Preservation Efforts History of Conservation Along with Yosemite's natural and human history, there is also an immense history of conservation and preservation efforts. There have been many failures, attempts, and successes in conserving the marvelous national park we know as Yosemite. From its establishment as a national park, to the transfer of the Yosemite Grant to Yosemite National Park, to the damming of the Hetch Hetchy reservoir, great efforts have been made to preserve the breathtaking landscape of Yosemite. Even though Yosemite Valley was legally and officially protected since 1864 by the passing of the Yosemite Grant, it developed into a cluttered series of roads, hotels, cabins, and pastures because of remiss state management. John Muir, a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Since Muir was a well–known writer at this point, Johnson posed the idea that Muir would become public voice of a campaign created to preserve Yosemite as a national park. After returning from their trip to Yosemite, Muir and Johnson started a media campaign in order to generate public support for their cause: making Yosemite a national park. Muir wrote two articles for Century Magazine that praised the captivating beauty of Yosemite and the horrible threats that it faced. They further increased efforts to make Yosemite a national park by giving speeches around the country. With the support of the public, Muir and Johnson's tireless efforts finally payed off. In 1890, Yosemite was appointed a national park. Despite the designation of Yosemite as a national park, the original Yosemite Grant, which protected Yosemite Valley and Mariposa Grove, still remained under the protection of California. However, the state was not up to the task of maintaining those two areas. John Muir believed that in order to be truly protected and salvaged, both Yosemite Valley and Mariposa Grove needed to be permanently moved to Yosemite National Park. This time, however, it was a lot more difficult as there was not as much support from people. Many hotel owners in Yosemite Valley opposed this idea with great determination because they were afraid that their businesses would be shut down if the grant was transferred to the federal government. In 1903, President Theodore ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. How Did John Muir Inspires Conservation 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 ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... 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 ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. How Did John Muir Impact The World John Muir was a Scottish–American writer, naturalist and advocate of the US Forest Association. He also was one of the founding members of the Sierra Club. Muir's early life was a normal one for most immigrants, he did some amazing things coming out of that though, and he impacted the world in many ways. John Muir was born is Scotland, but moved to America when he was 11. He was raised in a strict home, where his dad made him memorize the bible. He could recite the entire Old and New Testaments by heart, at the age of 11. His father would not allow him to waste daylight on reading or studying, so Muir created an invention to dump him out of bed early in the morning so he could. He invented many other things, such as a clock that told the correct time and other things made of wood. Muir was also the third of eight children. He and his younger brother roamed the fields and woods around their home whenever they could. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He had an accident that almost made him blind, and he really started to go after nature then. What he saw was people destroying nature, and he wanted to stop that. That is a problem because wild life needs to be protected and preserved, not taken away and destroyed. He was a co–founder of the Sierra Club and he helped create national parks. Muir is often called "The Father of Our National Parks" or "Citizen of the Universe." He wrote a lot of articles and books that inspired people to be in nature and enjoy it. One of his quotes from My First Summer in the Sierra is, "When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. John Muir Legacy To be so free and so adventurous that all the planning one puts into a venture is throwing a some tea and bread in an old sack and jumping over the back fence and simply going is a feat of human spirit in itself. This was the type of person John Muir, author of A Thousand–Mile Walk to the Gulf and renowned environmentalist, was. He lived to be in nature–– to explore and learn everything she had to offer him, and his passion is evident in all his writings. Throughout his travels and adventures, he diligently wrote his experiences down and later published them in various forms to spread awareness and document his findings, including some pictures he took. Muir was a person who was so truly fascinated and overwhelmed by the pure beauty of nature ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This legacy included the Sierra Club, a club Muir started and was president of during his life to bring together people and their efforts to promote conservation, preservation, and environmentalism within society. The Sierra Club still exists today as an organization that strives "to explore, enjoy, and protect the wild places of the earth," among other missions such as responsible use of resources and educating people about improving the human environment ("Policies"). This mission statement still exemplifies Muir's ideals and beliefs one hundred and twenty–five years after the club's creation–– a testament to the strength and influence of his actions. However, there is more to Muir's legacy than the Sierra Club. In 1908, six years before his death in 1914, Congressman William Kent donated over 150 acres of redwood forest to the government in order to preserve it, insisting it be named after John Muir ("Muir Woods"). Muir Woods, as it was titled, is a magnificently beautiful tract of land filled with towering redwoods. The fact that the park still exists more than one hundred years and Muir's name is still so commonly heard is simply more proof of Muir's lasting legacy which will undoubtedly continue to inspire and fascinate future generations. Finally, Muir's writings are the last part of his legacy. He wrote several books about his life and experiences in the Sierra, and one collection of his adventures to Alaska, but most of his books center on the American West and the Yosemite Valley. Although he did make some scientific ponderings and conclusions, the vast majority of Muir's writings centered on his daily experiences and were more descriptive than anything. According to John Leighly, " Muir's articles intended for the general public are as carefully written and contain as detailed and accurate observation as any scientific writing...in them Muir is attempting to share ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. John Muir Preservationism Conserving means to "protect (something, especially an environmentally or culturally important place or thing) from harm or destruction." John Muir, a famous preservationist is someone I agree with completely, his idea of preservationism is the best way to help our earth. Not damming Hetch Hetchy Valley was what really drew me into him. He believed that politicians were using nature as a way to get material gains. Muir believed that nature should be protected and should be kept beautiful. He states at one point that "everybody needs beauty as well as bread, places to play in and pray in where nature may heal and cheer and give strength to body and soul alike." (Who was John Muir? "The Sierra Club") He's saying that beauty is just as crucial ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... John believed that turning places into national parks would be a great way to conserve them, this allows for wild life and plants to be monitored and kept under control. With his great love for the idea of national parks, came a lot of pro's for the environment. Biodiversity plays an important role in national parks, biodiversity helps to keep environments clean and healthy for wild life. It allows for climate regulation, pollination and water purification. Yosemite National Park was one of Muir's creates accomplishments. He first traveled there in 1868 an loved the beauty and scenery so much that he decided to come back the next year and get a job as a rancher. Soon he became very concerned about natural landscape preservation. John Muir, being a preservationist, makes him the most admirable choice because he believed in protecting wild places for the sake of people and the sake of the well being of the earth. Pinchot, Muir's opposite, believed that conservation went hand in hand with development and that damming Hetch Hetchy would improve supplies in San Fransisco. The difference between conservationism and preservationism is that most times conservation focuses more on the needs of human beings. Preservationism is more focused on maintaining where the earth is at the time and the areas that are touched by humans. This idea helps to stop the invasion of human beings taking over open land and making them into farms and industries for developmental gain. This means that whatever we can preserve now, we can have in the future. A balance between the two would be difficult because of how strongly these opposing sides feel about the environment and what should be done in its best interest. I don't feel that a balance is possible because a lot of times human needs are the reason for natures destruction such as knocking down forests for paper, and building dams to help increase a water supply. Not only do these human needs take away ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Wordsworth And John Muir Essay John Muir and William Wordsworth are great examples of this theory. Throughout their stories, both men give great insight to how the harmony of nature impacts their lives in a way that can make them forget about all the sorrow and depression they have following behind them; Wordsworth and Muir's stories include syntax and diction to verbalize their passionate relationship towards nature. William Wordsworth's poem, "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud" excellently shows how the power of beauty can changes one's once depressed, sad day into joy and blissfulness. In Wordsworth's story, he exploits his experience of how nature changed his mood of depression and sorrow to grateful and glee when he stumbles across a bed of beautiful golden daffodils dancing in the breeze. Wordsworth writes: "A poet could not be but gay, in such a jocund company" (stanza 3). In this passage, Wordsworth shows his change of heart when in the presence of something so beautiful and alluring. Wordsworth also shows how nature impacts his mood from the quote: "They flash upon the inward eye, and my heart with pleasure fills" (stanza 4). In this final quote, Wordsworth explains that even when he is apart from the beautiful golden daffodils, it is the memory that keeps his spirits alive. While Wordsworth's experience with nature ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Most people in his place would have turned and given up, but it was his passion for nature that kept him going. In William Wordsworth's story, he wrote about how his sad, depressed mood disappeared when in the presence of the beautiful daffodils. He was so grateful and overjoyed to see them dancing in the wind that he kept that memory close, then thinks back to that day when he feels depressed. Both Wordsworth and Muir have unique relationships towards nature, but it's their shared love for all the beauty that nature has to offer that makes them one in the same with each ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. John Muir Analysis Image Analysis Images gain their power from the factors and decisions surrounding the site of production, site of the image, and the site of audiencing (Rose). If an observer takes an image and considers the effects each of these sites has had on their own reading of the image's meaning, the viewer's resulting analysis of the image will be more a more complete evaluation. The image of "Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir at Glacier Point, Yosemite" captures a time and place in such a way that even a century after the image's creation, students of visual studies can still use it to better understand how and where an image develops its meaning. The image "Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir at Glacier Point, Yosemite" features the President and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Looking at images like this analytically would be an excellent first step when crafting a research paper. The image "Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir at Glacier Point, Yosemite" could inspire a visual studies student to delve into further research on the creation of national parks, the politics surrounding their establishment or the establishment of Yosemite specifically, or even more specific research on either Theodore Roosevelt or John Muir. Personally, this image made me more interested in understanding the use of images to market the national parks in the early twentieth century and how this has changed with the rise of new technologies in the subsequent decades. Images like "Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir at Glacier Point, Yosemite" can also be used to supplement a completed research paper. If one were to write a research paper about the establishment of the National Park System, the image "Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir at Glacier Point, Yosemite" would be a good accompaniment. Not only is it informative in its own right, but it also spurs curiosity in the viewer. Is the image part of a series of photographs of Roosevelt's travels with Muir? Did the two men like each other or were they just posing together for posterity? And for the modern environmentalist, the essential question maybe what does this landscape look like now? The answers to these questions could be answered within the text of the research paper. It is suspected that the most important images for the research paper will be those that require additional explanation for full comprehension. This marries the text and images into one cohesive ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. John Muir The Muckraker The Muckraker John Muir 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 ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. Compare Roosevelt And John Muir President Theordore Roosevelt and John Muir went on a camping trip to Yosemite Valley in 1903.Both, Theordore Roosevelt and John Muir went together they both had the same goal to preserve nature.They also went together because, John Muir was the only person that President Roosevelt would go with. In source one it is about, how President Theordore Roosevelt and John Muir go to the Yosemite valley together because, "that is the only person that Roosevelt will go with". Roosevelt said, "What are we supposed to do when all of are forest are gone because, of all these people that are destroying them".In passage 1, it states " In 1890, the government formed Yosemite National Park, but the new park did not include Yosemite Valley".In this passage, it is very important for Roosevelt and John to save the red wood trees because that is both of there goals in life and they decided to do it together.In the middle of the passage, it talks about how were they traveled to and how they got there and things like that.Next, At the end of the story it talks about what they ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Secondly,The only birds he noticed or cared for were some that were very conspicuous, such as the water–ouzels always particular favorites of mine too"In this passage,it talks about how someone talked Roosevelt into going to camp with him.According to Roosevelt. , it talks about how they camped in a snowstorm that night.In conclusion,the passage is about how they got to the place and what the nights were like the two days he ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. John Muir Biography "The clearest way into the Universe is through a forest wilderness." (Wood, Harold. "John Muir: A Brief Biography." John Muir Biography – John Muir Exhibit, vault.sierraclub.org/john_muir_exhibit/life/muir_biography.aspx. Accessed 22 May 2017.) This quote is one of John Muir's most famous quotes. In this quote, John Muir is expressing his view on the world. John Muir always loved nature, he was a naturalist ever since he was a young child. John Muir grew up on a farm where he was surrounded by plants. Whenever he would do the farm work he would observe the plants, stare at them, and learn from them (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Muir ). John Muir had many siblings. With one of his brothers, he used to run around the field and just have ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When John Muir was concerned about preserving nature nobody else really cared, because back then it was viewed as "not such a big deal." ("John Muir." National Parks Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, www.nps.gov/yose/learn/historyculture/muir.htm. Accessed 22 May 2017.) But to Muir it was. When someone would cut down a tree he would become devastated because he thought that nature had feelings too. He believed that it hurt the earth when someone would "rip apart the forest and parks." ("About the Sierra Club." Sierra Club, 12 May 2017, www.sierraclub.org/about. Accessed 22 May 2017.) He believed that wildlife needs to be preserved because it is so beautiful. He was hurt that so many people didn't care and would just rip it apart and knew that he could change something about it. It is like watching somebody ruin something you love so much and you have to watch and know about it but not take action, but John Muir took action and tried to avoid letting anybody harm the beloved plants. ("About the Sierra Club." Sierra Club, 12 May 2017, www.sierraclub.org/about. Accessed 22 May 2017.) He was able to do that when he made the area a National Park. When Theodore Roosevelt realized how beautiful nature was, he wanted to help any way possible. Roosevelt did this by making a law that any park declared a national park cannot be hurt or taken down by the government in anyway shape or form. Most parks that are already national ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. Sierra Club Case Study Being a part of an interest group is about being apart of something that is bigger than just one person. It's advocating for change, for everyone. The Sierra Club is no different. This environmental organization does more than just exist, it makes a difference. The Sierra Club is a public interest organization that was founded on May 28, 1892 by the Scottish– American preservationist, naturalist, and philosopher John Muir. He was, not surprisingly, the organization's first president. His work focused mostly on his excursions and observations in the Sierra Nevada mountain range, hence the name. Prior to creating the Sierra Club in honor of the Sierra mountain range, John Muir helped to successfully campaign for a bigger park for the Yosemite ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It is "the nation's largest and most influential grassroots environmental organization," according to its official website. The 2.4 million members and supporters have helped to successfully pass the Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, and the Endangered Species Act. Besides lobbying politicians, the club organizes over 20,000 local and international outdoor activities such as hiking or rock climbing to experience what it's all about. The organization has also helped to create 431 different parks and monuments and also advocated for and was successful in the protection of approximately 250 million acres of land. The group attracts members from all over the world. Individuals who choose to be apart of the Sierra Club are individuals who are environmentally conscious, and want to make a difference in the environment. They are tree–huggers, nature lovers, and environmentalists. Recently, the organization has advocated to get rid of fossil fuels in favor of moving toward "a clean energy economy." Their progress on achieving this is demonstrated through statistics, the organization has helped to retire approximately 200 coal plants. They are currently also addressing climate change, and also fracking and tar ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. The California Water Crisis And The Fight For Conservation Ever since the early nineteenth century until today, the California water crisis has been an issue that is yet to be resolved. As one of the largest states with a population of over thirty million (Class Discussion); water consumption is in high demand. "From the very beginning, California was a state with tremendous agricultural potential"(Chan, S., and Olin, S. Pg 136). A similarity from both the California of the early 1800 's and today is that water is an expensive and important resource being sourced primarily from the Sierra Nevada Mountains. The difference between then and now is that previously we had an abundant water supply but we did not know how to utilize it effectively to meet demand. Contrast that situation to today, and the demand for water remains, however the supply is no longer available to meet the needs of Californians. In this paper, we will discuss the legislative decision 's to bring California's water supply to its people, the fight for conservation, and discuss the drought as it is today. During the early 1800s and 1900s the legislation passed involving water was regarding how it could be brought to the people. In 1886, Lux vs Haggin established the "California Doctrine"(Sucheng, C., and Olin, S. Pg 138). This ruled that any corporation or person to whom was brought water by an agent of the state would be charged a fee and need to comply with all rules and regulations. The main reason for the written law was to "provide a mode by which the state, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. John Muir: Preserving Nature In 1903, President Roosevelt went on a camping trip to Yosemite Valley, and with a famous outdoorsman John Muir. Consequent to the trip, their purpose was to preserve the Yellowstone National Park, and other parks, so that the forest could be around for many more years to come. Moreover, John Muir has often tried to persuade people to preserve the area and to keep Yosemite's valley beauty shining, conversely that was not an easy task. Preserving nature is bigger than it seems, though it may seem like an ancient place that is just a tourist attraction. There is much more to it, around 400 species live in that area, and it needs to be protected from thieves and lumberman who could destroy the area. According to Passage One, paragraph 5, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. Analysis Of John Muir Feelings of security, happiness, are invoked when I think of nature. Nature is kind, healing, and relaxing. John Muir captured the essence of these characteristics while conveying these exact thoughts. Furthermore, Muir expresses the freedom mountaineers have while climbing as they are cradled in the quiet peace of nature. Muir believes that anyone can regain their sense of freedom and find inner peace by being out in nature and exploring it. In fact, Muir indirectly suggests that if the world kept in touch with the wild places around them, it would resolve many issues and stressors that plague humanity today. If people, myself included, spent more time outside and in nature, it would leave them and myself feeling refreshed, relaxed, and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. John Muir vs. Gifford Pinchot Have you ever heard of John Muir and Gifford Pinchot? These two men expressed different beliefs over preservation and conservation. John Muir was America's most famous conservationist. While Gifford Pinchot was one of America's leading preservationist. Both of these men spent most of their lifetime defending the natural resources and the wildlife around the world. John Muir is one of California's most important historical personalities. Born in Scotland, he has been called "The Father of our National Parks," "Wilderness Profit," and "Citizen of the Universe." As a wilderness explorer, his exciting adventures in the Sierra Nevada and Alaska's glaciers led him searching for nature's beauty. Gifford Pinchot was born to a wealthy family on ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Roosevelt's successor, President Taft, did not really care for government ownership of land. This is what divided Roosevelt and Taft and led to the creation of the Progressive Party. Pinchot ran for the United States Senate but did not win. He then changed from national to State politics. His goal was governorship. This is where he believed he would have the greatest opportunity ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. Progressivism During The Progressive Era The Progressive Era was a period of social activism and political reform that grew from the 1890s to the 1920s. Social reformers and journalists, like Jane Addams, Jacob Riis, and Ida Tarbell were some of the powerful voices for progressivism. "They concentrated on exposing the evils of corporate greed, combating fear of immigrants, and urging Americans to think hard about what democracy meant." Many progressive reformers wanted to end corruption in the government, regulate business practices, address health hazards, and improve working conditions. It was also an era of conservationists. Conservationists are people who protect and preserve the environment and wildlife. Throughout the Progressive Era, there were many conservationists who wrote and described nature, but the most well–known figure in conservation was John Muir. John Muir worked to protect Earth's beauty by traveling and exploring nature, co–founding the Sierra Club, and by influencing others through his writings and by showing some of the most important people how the wildlife was magnificent. 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 ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. John Muir: United States Forest Conservation Movement John Muir was a native of Scotland; however, he was an American naturalist at heart. As an author, explorer, and naturalist, Muir was an important character in the United States forest conservation movement in the late 1800's and early 1900's. Through his endeavors, many national parks were established and preserved for generations to come. John Muir was born on April 21, 1838 in Dunbar, Scotland. In 1849, he and his family moved to Wisconsin where they started a farm. Muir later described this part of his life in his autobiography, The Story of My Boyhood and Youth, 1913 ("Frequently"). As a boy, Muir read every book he could find, a self–education that enabled him to enroll in the University of Wisconsin in 1860. Three years later, he left school without receiving a degree because he disliked abiding by a fixed curriculum. When Muir was a young man he took on small jobs to support himself as he adventured throughout the United States. In 1867, while working at an Indianapolis carriage shop, Muir injured his eye causing a temporary blindness that would change his life. After one month, Muir regained his sight and determined to turn his eyes to the nature, to forget mechanical inventions and devote himself instead to "the study of the inventions of God" (McGuire). He traveled by foot from Indianapolis to the Gulf of Mexico, recording his observations ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... His almost–spiritual descriptions of nature inspired influential and common people alike. Muir's articles in the Century Magazine picked up him the consideration and companionship of its similarly invested manager, Robert Underwood Johnson. Their consolidated endeavors prompted a demonstration of Congress that made Yosemite National Park in 1890. Muir and Johnson were along these lines associated with advance preservation acts that brought about the security of Sequoia, Mount Rainier and Petrified Forest, and Grand Canyon National ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. Similarities Between John Muir And Roosevelt Have you ever been to a national park? Many of those parks took a lengthy time to be preserved under government control and people had to fight to preserve them. Take Yosemite National Park for instance, John Muir had devoted 30 years of his life to that park. John worked fairly close with President Roosevelt on his life's work. Muir and Roosevelt had a shared objective to preserve Yosemite because they both admire nature, they both continuously fought for Yosemite's preservation and they both spent an enduring amount of time on it. First of all they both clearly admire nature because when passage 1 says "The president deeply loved the outdoors and had a great understanding of nature." This tells that the president loved nature, and that he understood what was going on and reasons why it needed to be protected not just because it is beautiful but for nature reasons such as how the trees in Yosemite are native to Yosemite so if they were not preserved than they could face obsolescence .In ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... For example, when the article says " Just days after his camping trip, Roosevelt gave a passionate speech urging forest preservation.'' this gives a look on how passionate the president was about preserving Yosemite after his trip. He urged preservation, he didn't want the beauty of the park to go to waste because people believe, ''the country is too big to be used up". Then again, when John said "Any fool can destroy trees, but only Uncle Sam can save them." He wanted to tell people that the government needs to protect the forests because without trees we would all die. He knew that without them there would be nothing so they must save them before it's too late. But, there already was a Yosemite National Park but it didn't include Yosemite Valley and John Muir still fought to protect the whole park instead of just protecting the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. John Muir's Appreciation Of Nature John Muir was an author, explorer and a lover of nature and wants to expand the people's appreciation of nature. As a young man, he would explore and write. These two things carried on throughout his life. He has made many contributions to help people with their appreciation of nature. John Muir was well remembered and respected for the things he has accomplished. Born in Dunbar, Scotland, John Muir moved to U.S. with his family in 1849. They moved to a farm in Wisconsin. At the University of Wisconsin, Muir studied geology and botany. Muir then received a job at Yosemite Valley, and came across a spiritual connection with nature. In addition to that connection, he had created a goal. John Muir was an early advocate for the idea of national ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Summary Of My First Summer In The Sierra By John Muir I have never read this book before but in my environmental ethics (environment 243) class this book was brought up a lot in lecture. It somewhat reminds me of Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature by William Cronon or My First Summer in the Sierra by John Muir. Leopold wrote so beautifully and views the world in such a more elaborate way than I do, a way I hope to one day achieve. One of my favorite analogies is under January Thaw where he talks about an owl circling around a bloody spot with tufts of rabbit hair. To me I would just think that the owl got a kill and keep moving but Leopold sees it in both the owl and rabbits point of view. He says "To this rabbit the thaw brought freedom from want, but also reckless abandonment ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It is something I have learned about in class but I like Leopold's perspective of it. This is when he shot a wolf and watched the fire in her eyes die. Back then it was very okay to shoot wolves because they were only looked at negatively, and the same thing is happening to this very day. After shooting the wolf he looked in her eyes right before she died and said "there was something new to me in those eyes–something known only to her and the mountain". He shot her because fewer wolves meant more deer which is desirable for hunters. But he then realized how everything on that mountain connected, and that more deer meant the mountain would be browsed to death. More deer means less vegetation on the mountain meaning a less diverse ecosystem and less native plants, which we learned about in class that those are very important. Under Thinking Like a Mountain, "I now suspect that just as a deer herd lives in mortal fear of its wolves, so does a mountain live in mortal fear of its deer". He sees the interconnectedness of relationships to the mountain back in the early 1900's and I am taught about it in classes to this day because he is realizing the different trophic levels and how they are all ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. John Muir: The Hero Of Yosemite John Muir of many names, the Wilderness Prophet, Citizen of the Universe, the Father of Our National Parks, was one of the mountain's most valued American Scots. The founder of the Sierra Club did everything within his power to "make the mountains glad," ("The John Muir Exhibit"). With the president at his side and his convincing journalism, John Muir became the hero of Yosemite, and a preservationist symbol to Americans, as well activists everywhere. He is a hero because he took a stand for what was important to him. The year was 1903, Theodore Roosevelt, whom most would've assumed to be arriving near Yosemite to meet with other politicians, or maybe sign some documentations, or whatever business democrats would tend to, had just arrived ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. Pros And Cons Of John Muir John Muir is best known for his efforts to preserve the wilderness of the United States, which greatly contributed to the preservation of countless natural areas of the US through the National Parks Service. During his travels across the country and abroad, Muir recorded his thoughts and beliefs about nature and the fundamental connection people share with the earth. By voyaging into the wild and shedding the restraints and ideals of modern society, Muir argues that people can expand their understanding of the world and experience life to its full potential through immersing themselves in nature. First and foremost a researcher of the environment, Muir believed that by spending time in nature, he could more deeply understand the earth and all of the knowledge it has to offer. During one of his numerous expeditions in the Yosemite Valley in 1869, Muir remarks that "...these lawless wanderings will be valuable as suggestive beginnings... if I should return to the awkward rules & laws of civilization & be buried as a strand into the thick of society." He knows that if he returns to civilization, his excursions will be no more than beginnings of research that will serve no real purpose. He further comments that, "These sweet free roamings be as little chinks & seams on life's horizon whence I may obtain narrow glimpses of the treasures of the Kingdoms of Nature beyond." Just as the horizon blocks out sunlight, Muir argues that civilization blocks out the opportunity to discover ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. John Muir Research Paper The early leader that I choose to write about for this paper is John Muir. John Muir was born on April 21, 1838 in Dunbar, Scotland. John Muir has been credited with a lot of great things that have benefited the parks and recreation movement. The contributions that he founded back then are still being felt around the world today. At first John Muir, has been credited as the found of the National Parks System. So, if Muir has been credited for that discovery then we can thank him for all the beautiful national parks system. Without John Muir, we might not have places such as Yosemite National Park, or the Grand Canyon. Beyond that John Muir, and several of his followers also came up with the invention of the Sierra Club. The goal of the Sierra ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... I consider him to be a leader, because he could take charge of a group of people, and make them follow through with what goals he was teaching them about. He had many qualities that made him such a good leader. The first quality that he possessed was that he was very good on the social aspect of the leadership scale. He had to be a good on the social end, and based on that he was one of the best coaches I had due to his social factor was great to get through to his players. Before other coaches that I had wouldn't be able to get through to all the players, because they lacked the communications skills to get through to every player. After that, he had a plan, but if the team wasn't doing something right he would make us stay on that activity until we did it right which mean he could handle situations in the best way possible even if it would screw up the plan for the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. John Muir 's Influence On American History 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 ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Muir believed that the stunning beauty of the Yosemite valley deserved to be protected so that people from all around the world could view. From the first time Muir saw the Sierra Nevadas he regarded them very highly, "a landscape was displayed that after all my wanderings still appears as the most beautiful I have ever beheld. At my feet lay the Great Central Valley of California" (Muir 2). Muir goes further in detail as to why it was the most beautiful sight he had ever seen, "Along the top and extending a good way down, was a rich pearl–gray belt of snow; below it a belt of blue and dark purple, marking the extension of the forests... from the blue sky to the yellow valley smoothly blending as they do in a rainbow, making a wall of light ineffably fine. Then it seemed to me that the Sierra should be called, not the Nevada or Snowy Range, but the Range of Light" (Muir 2 and 3). This beauty that Muir describes in his book The Yosemite was one of the major contributors to his founding of the Yosemite valley as a national park (Muir 1–3). Turner 3 The biggest focal point of John Muir's attraction towards the Yosemite valley was the wide variety of flowers and trees, and he believed that these should be protected. Muir felt very strongly about the importance of the trees and in particular one, "The most influential of the Valley trees is the yellow ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. John Muir: Founder Of The Sierra Club "Wander a whole summer if you can. Time will not be taken from the sum of life. Instead of shortening, it will definitely lengthen it and make you truly immortal." ––John Muir John Muir, founder of the Sierra Club, is well known as one of the nation's greatest environmentalists and conservationists. Muir spent many years of his life wandering around in the hills of Northern California, experiencing a phenomenon that can only be described as wanderlust. The term wanderlust describes an innate feeling or desire to travel. Just a few short weeks ago, I packed my bag and hopped on a plane bound for Spain, in an attempt to rekindle my own wanderlust. Growing up, I was extremely lucky to have a family that believed in traveling all over the country ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... While no trip to any country is complete without sampling the regional food, the Camino allowed us to sample the local fare from a new town every single day. I thought this was such a fantastic aspect of the trip because it forced all of us to try various items and not simply eat the same old thing every day. Nearly every cafè along the Camino served a pilgrim's dinner, which consisted of two entrees, bread, water and a dessert, which ends up being a substantial amount of food by the time all is said and done. The pilgrim's dinner varied greatly in quality, but not so much in menu choices, as many of the restaurants offered similar options. Towards the end of our Camino, we began to stray from the pilgrim's dinners and indulge in tapas, or small plates, which allowed us to sample everything from tortadas to octopus, However, one option that was never offered along the entire Camino adventure was free water at the dinner table. While water could be found in random locations scattered along the trail, the idea of filling up water glasses at the table with water from a faucet was totally foreign to the Spanish. When a group asks for water, the waiter brings bottled water to the table, which runs up the table's tab pretty quickly. Around the dinner table was also the location where I began to notice a striking difference between American and Spanish culture. Every time I was sitting at the table, listening to all the members of my group speaking so loudly you could hear them from across the room, I looked around at other patrons of the restaurant and noticed they weren't speaking nearly as loud. In fact, you could hardly hear any of them at all. After noticing this phenomenon the first few times, I began to realize exactly why Americans are often times perceived as being loud, rowdy and sort of obnoxious; and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. John Muir Research Paper A man named John Muir was born on April 21, 1838 in Dunbar, Scotland. In 1849, at the age of 11, Muir and his family emigrated to Portage, Wisconsin. Growing up, Muir and his brother would roam the fields and the woods of the rich Wisconsin countryside (Sierra Club 2015). In 1867, while John Muir was working in a carriage parts shop, he suffered a blinding eye injury. After Muir recovered, he decided that he would leave work and go study nature. In 1868, he visited California and that became his home. Muir was fascinated by California's Sierra Nevada and the Yosemite. He was hired as a shepherd's assistant in Yosemite Valley. John Muir wrote a series of articles called the "Studies in the Sierra" and this launched his successful career as ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The city of San Francisco proposed building a dam in Hetch Hetchy, a glacier carved valley at the time, to produce a steady water supply. The Valley was in Yosemite National Park and it was protected by the federal government. It was then up to the Congress to decide the survival of the valley. Conservationists believed that the environment should be used in a industrious manner to benefit the people, while the preservationist believed that nature should be preserved and saved from human destruction. Hundred of organizations and individuals submitted petitions to Congress about the valley. Congress eventually passed legislation that allowed the formation of the dam. This defeat helped transform the Sierra Club from a politically naive hiking club into a formidable and politically astute environmental organization (Snell ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. John Muir's Argument For The Preservation Of The Yosemite... Fifteen miles south of the world–renowned Yosemite Valley sits the Hetch Hetchy Valley with its water roaring. Hard to believe, the desolate valley was once recognized as the exact counterpart of the Yosemite Valley for its natural beauty– cascading waterfalls, lofty mountain cliffs, and serene rivers. John Muir, an ardent advocate for the preservation of the wilderness, described the experience of visiting Hetch Hetchy to be a sheer pleasure: "it [was] a bright day in June; the air [was] drowsy with flies; the pines [swayed] dreamily, and you [were] sunk, shoulder–deep, in grasses and flowers." He devoted himself into campaigning for its integrity when the San Francisco city government proposed to dam the valley for municipal water supply ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It also threatened the future of other national parks because it set up a precedent for appropriating protected natural resources to utilitarian uses. Strengthened by his personal attachment to the Hetch Hetchy Valley, he appealed to the public sentiments and eloquently criticized the shortsighted "exploiters" like mayor Phelan in various forms of writings including books and newspaper articles. In addition, John Muir took on political actions in this battle, gathering national support for his position. He traveled to New York and Washington D.C. to give speeches and meet with the secretary of the interior, Democratic leaders, and speaker of the house. He also innovated "grassroots lobbying", a means to persuade elected officials of his position by urging individual citizens to express their support of him with letters to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32. How Did John Muir Conserve Nature John Muir lived on this earth from April 21, 1838 to December 24, 1914. For as long as he lived, Muir devoted himself to the environment. Muir was so dedicated to nature and protecting the wilderness, that he is known as the Father of National Parks. Muir was an advocate for the preservation and conservation of forests and natural resources. He constantly urged that nature should be under the protection of the federal government. He created the Sierra Club that worked to protect the environment. Muir wrote numerous articles and books about nature and the conservation of it. It was important to him that there were places in the wilderness that were safeguarded in their entirety and it is of the utmost importance that we continue John Muir's works. We only have one earth, so we need to do everything we can to preserve it. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... First and foremost, "God was more easily found in nature than in works of man." This quote really resonated with me. In the The National Parks: America's Best Idea video, it talked about Muir finding a stronger faith with God out in the wilderness than he could in any church. Being a religious person myself, I really do find these quotes to be true. When you submerge yourself into the beauty of nature, I feel you really find yourself inspired and in awe of God's creations. Another reason I chose Muir is for all the work he's done to aid in the creation of National and State Parks. My family of six never really has the time or money to ever go on vacation, so when we do, we always go to National and State Parks, wildlife refuges, historical places, and other things of that nature. Most of my favorite memories of my family are essentially because of Muir. Without the founding of these places I'm afraid we would all be so absorbed in ourselves and in technological advances. That we would miss the true beauty that's right outside. From what I've watched and read, he just seems like a guy I'd get along ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. Comparing John Muir And Theodore Roosevelt's Camping Trip... John Muir and Theodore Roosevelt went on a camping trip in Yosemite Valley. They went in March of 1903. They planned a camping trip because they planned to preserve nature in Yosemite Valley. 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. When Roosevelt went to california ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. President Roosevelt's National Parks And Preservation... As President Mckinley condition stabilized, post being shot, Vice–President Theodore Roosevelt embarked to view the vastness of nature in the less developed west. His trip was cut short, as he got word that Mckinley's condition had turned for the worse. Mckinley was pronounced dead September 14, 1901; subsequently, Roosevelt was sworn into the presidency, along with his progressive views. Although this was not the start of the conservation and preservation movements, extended from the late 19th through the early 20th century, it was a major step for the movement as Roosevelt had empathy for activists and nature. The combination of a movement and a president who was willing to move resulted in five national parks and 18 national monuments being established by the end of Roosevelt's presidency. After the establishment of these parks, the lands were to be preserved by federal government, but the political and economical agendas of those opposed to the conservation and preservation movements still endangered the pristine land. The fact that it took a president to get assassinated, before any serious legislative help came to aid the conservation and preservation movements. If the movement came in a more populated group, which could agree on how save the environment around us, then it wouldn't have taken this mishap to get the ball rolling. The battle for Hetch Hetchy highlighted the different views within the movement, all in favor of environmental protection. Years later ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35. John Muir: His Achievements Essay John Muir: His Achievements/Journeys John Muir worked at a factory in Canada. He invented time and money saving machines for the factories. But one day an accident changed his whole outlook on life. As he was tightening a machine belt with a file, the file flew out and pierced his right eye. His left eye grew dim to the reaction. John's friends and neighbors tried to help him and brought doctors. Some friends read to him. Children brought him flowers and listened to his stories. He finally began to regain his sight. His employer, grateful for the work that he had done for his company, offered John a job as foreman and a future partnership. But John gave up the chance to be a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the next ten years of visit to Alaska, Muir would track glaciers and observe them. John Muir will spend the rest of his life writing books about nature and speak out for nature. He will suffer the lost of his wife and abate his grief by observing a pertrified forest. John Muir really was a man of the mountains. I believe that John Muir was a very hard working and determined man. The fact that he overcomes the struggles of his life to accomplish all that he did makes him an even more remarkable man. I think that it is great that there is a man that would speak out for such a wonderful thing like nature in a time where people didn't care. He has accomplished so much in his life that I am surprised that he is not as well–known. He should be written about and taught about more. John Muir can inspire a person to care more for nature and become more considerate and passionate to it. CHILDHOOD John Muir was born in Dunbar, Scotland, on April 21, 1838. He had two older sisters named Margaret and Sarah and two younger brothers named David and Daniel, Jr. and twin sisters named Mary and Annie. They were all born in Dunbar except a younger sister, Joanna, that was born after they moved to the United States. John's father was Daniel Muir and John's mother was Ann Gilrye Muir. Daniel was a man of strong feelings. His religious ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. John Muir Research Paper Ever since John Muir's childhood, he always loved nature. Muir was born April 21, 1838 in beautiful rural Scotland. He loved to escape out into the Scottish wilderness and explore its unknown beauty. Even when he moved to America at age 11, he continued to sneak away from home to explore the wilderness of Wisconsin. But Muir was more than just a man of nature, he was a man of science. He attended the university of Wisconsin, but dropped out; not because of his grades, but because he took the classes he wanted and not the required ones. Muir was an avid inventor, submitting many of his creations to the state fair. Muir once created a "wondrous device that tipped him out of bed before dawn"(Wood 2015). Muir later moved to montreal, Canada to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... But what was more extraordinary was what he did, not who he was. Muir established the first national parks, protected and created new ones, raised awareness about nature and the importance of conservation, and created one of the world's leading conservationist's organization ("Sierra Club" 2017). He did all of this through his writings, leadership, and diplomacy. In addition to what he did during his life, Muir also left a legacy that continues to inspire and educate thousands about nature. The revolutionary books Muir wrote over a hundred years ago are still in print today. Hundreds of places are named after Muir, such as the John Muir lodge in King's Canyon national park, or Muir peak in L.A. (Wood 2017). The Sierra Club still prospers to this day, working hard to preserve our national parks and the environment for future generations. America celebrates the man who took a stand for the environment every April 21, John Muir day, for everything he has done for the country. A writer, a leader, and a diplomat, Muir took a stand for our environment. America will forever be grateful to John Muir, the Father of our National ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. John Muir: Ancestor, Pioneer, And Writer John Muir was a farmer, inventor, sheepherder, explorer, and writer. Without him lots of places we love, like Yosemite and many more, would not be here today. John Muir was born was born on April 21st in 1838 in Dunbar, Scotland. He was the third of his parents eight children. John's father was religious and very harsh. He forced John and his siblings to work in the fields. Their father also did not let them read books at a young age, so he found a way. He was interested in inventing, so he built a bed that would tilt at a steep angle causing him to slip out of bed. This was one of John's earliest inventions. His family moved to America when he was about eleven. John ran away from his family to get away from his father. He went to exhibit his inventions at the State Agriculture Fair in Madison. In the year 1861, he attended the university of Wisconsin for two and a half years. He taught a public school during the winter of 1861. While he was at school he invented a study desk that retrieves a book, holds it in place for the prescribed period of time, and then it automatically replaces it with another book. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Botany is the study of plants. A year later he took his first botanical foot journey along the Wisconsin River to the Mississippi. Two years later in 1864 at the age of 26, he traveled to Canada and stayed there for about two years. He tried to save a part of Fountain Lake farm because that was the first place his family settled down. He ended up being a major contributor to the formation of the national park ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. The National Park Is One Of The Most Well Known National... Yosemite National Park is one of the most well known national parks in the United States. It is especially famous for its beautifully inspiring scenery. Yosemite expands 748,542 acres and is located on the western slope of the Sierra Nevada. The elevation of the park ranges from 2,127 to 13,114 feet (Bortman, p. 1546). The closest town is Mariposa with neighboring counties including Madera and Fresno. Today, 3.5 million people visit Yosemite annually ("History & Culture – Yosemite National Park (U.S. National Park Service)"). With the attraction of millions of tourists, the national park has been designated inalienable for all time. The creation of Yosemite dates back to the Precambrian era. The region of what is now Yosemite sat between two continents. The Farallon Plate subducted under the North American Plate and created an arc of volcanoes during the Devonian and Permian periods (Harris, p. 328). The solidification of magma created igneous rock during the Triassic period and in through the Jurassic. On the eastern side of present day Yosemite, the Nevadan mountain range was also forming. The Sierra Nevada Mountains are constructed of granite (Harris, p. 337). The creation of Yosemite Valley was by glaciation. The formation of glaciers and the process of being covered by these ice sheets began approximately 3 million years ago (Harris, p. 339). According to Harris, at least four of these glaciations have occurred (p. 339). The first glaciation, called the Sherwin, was ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. John Muir And Pinchot Analysis Both John Muir and Gifford Pinchot aimed to protect North American wilderness due to unregulated land development but form different perspectives. John Muir is one of the key figure to promote the idea of preservation. (Bulkan J., 2016) In his understanding wilderness offers people an opportunity to revisit and experience nature away from busy city lives. (Difference Between Conservation and Preservation., 2011) The purpose of preservation is to restore wilderness by advocating federal national protection. For example, the formation of the first American national park – Yosemite National Park in 1864. The way it works is to have a place without any human activities to further disturb the ecosystem. He believes in anthropocentric view which means that nature ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... However, indigenous people lose their traditional territory because of the restrict rules. They were no longer allowed to live in that land. Different from John Muir, Pinchot embraced the idea of conservation which is a mechanism for wise and sustainable management of natural resources for economical purpose. (Bulkan J., 2016) He mainly focused on timber production and protection of water resources. (Bulkan J., 2016) However, he believed human should use resources in a way that provide the greatest good to the greatest number for the longest time. Therefore, it is more sustainable for the future generation. Form my perspective, Pinchot was more anthropocentric than Muir. Because he did not claim protection and deny nature has its own inherent value. Pinchot has three principles when it comes to conservation: conservation for sustainable development, efficiency and equity. (Bulkan J., 2016) Conservation in some other words stands for development. Form my perspective, Pinchot was more anthropocentric than Muir. Because he did not claim protection and deny nature has its own inherent ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...