10,544 research outputs found

    Reconnecting with John Muir Essays in Post-Pastoral Practice

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    Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- TO JOHN MUIR FROM LAKE TENAYA -- 1. Keeping Faith with the Source -- TO JOHN MUIR FROM THE RIM OF NEVADA FALLS -- 2. Muir as Practitioner of the Post-Pastoral -- TO JOHN MUIR FROM MONO LAKE -- 3. Muir's Multiple Discourses -- TO JOHN MUIR FROM LAKE TAHOE -- 4. Teaching Environmentalism through Writing -- TO JOHN MUIR FROM THE TRAIL TO MIRROR LAKE -- 5. Muir's Mode of Reading John Ruskin -- TO JOHN MUIR FROM CAMP FOUR -- 6. Rick Bass's Fiber as a Post-Pastoral Georgic -- TO JOHN MUIR FROM TUOLUMNE MEADOWS -- 7. Walking into Narrative Scholarship -- TO JOHN MUIR FROM FAIRVIEW DOME -- 8. Teaching Post-Pastoral Poetry of Landscape -- TO JOHN MUIR FROM MOUNT HOFFMAN -- 9. Tests of Character in Cold Mountain -- TO JOHN MUIR FROM CATHEDRAL PEAK -- 10. Muir's Fourfold Concept of the Mountaineer -- TO JOHN MUIR FROM GLACIER POINT APRON -- 11. Toward a Post-Pastoral Mountaineering Literature -- TO JOHN MUIR FROM THE ROYAL ARCHES -- 12. Post-Pastoral Practice at the Crossroads of Ecocriticism -- TO JOHN MUIR FROM HALF DOME -- Appendix A. Introducing Ecocriticism into the University Curriculum -- Appendix B. Twenty-five Kinds of Post-Pastoral Landscape Poem -- Appendix C. Advice for New Writers Targeting Outdoor Magazines -- Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- YDescription based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, YYYY. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries

    The Mountains. John Muir.

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    The Mountains John Muir Climb the mountains and get their good tidings. Nature’s peace will flow into you as sunshine flows into trees. The winds will blow their own freshness into you, and the storms their energy, while cares will drop off like autumn leaves. [John Muir]https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmb/1296/thumbnail.jp

    John Muir Observer Journal

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    John Muir was a constant observer, and he recorded his observations in one of his countless journals. The John Muir Observer Journal is a collaboration between the John Muir Center and ForestChoice designed to get you to observe the world around you like John Muir did. Each journal features 16 pages filled with drawings, notes and writings from John Muir’s personal records, along with 144 blank pages so you can record your own observations. A portion of the proceeds from each journal will be donated to the John Muir Center and their effort to promote the study of John Muir’s work.https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/libraries-books/1028/thumbnail.jp

    The John Muir Newsletter, Spring 2015

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    SPRING 2015 jJui JMaaaa, JL^aXAXaa, V\u3eP , THE JOHN MUIR CENTER Reflections on John Muir— One-hundred years after his death Bill Swagerty, Co-Director, John Muir Center During 2014, many institutions honored John Muir\u27s legacy with an event associated with the centennial of his death on December 24, 1914. It was also the fiftieth anniversary of passage of the Wilderness Act by Congress in 1964 and the 150th anniversary of the Yosemite Act, transferring the core of what would become Yosemite National Park from the State of California to the federal government. Pacific hosted the 60th California History Institute from March 20-22 focusing on What has been saved; what has been lost: John Muir\u27s Legacy, 1914-2014. The symposium began with a field trip to Martinez on March 20 to visit John Muir National Historic Site. Twenty-four students in the John Muir Class were joined by other Pacific students, faculty, and guests of the university. As always, rangers and interpreters opened the doors to the Strentzel-Muir-Hanna house on the hill and allowed us the privilege of seeing Muir\u27s grave- site nearby. At the gravesite, Michael Wurtz, Head of Holt-Atherton Special Collections, read a 1914 obituary from a local newspaper which included mention of those who attended Muir\u27s funeral. On March 21, another field trip by bus took students and guests to Coulterville along the route that Muir walked in 1868 on his first trip to Yosemite. Ken Pulvino, founder of the John Muir Geotourism Center, joined the bus in Modesto and explained Muir\u27s stop at Horseshoe Bend, where he made an elaborate sketch of the landscape. Educator Monty Thornberg, current Director of the Center gave a presentation at lunch in the Hotel Jeffery on the activities of the Center, which promotes tourism and environmental education along the John Muir Highway. The Jeffery dates to 1851 and was a stagecoach stop for Yo- semite-bound passengers, as well as a resting place and reprovisioning opportunity for pedestrians like Muir on his long walk to the Valley. Bill Jeffery, husband to Pacific\u27s Pamela Eibeck, explained his family\u27s likely connection with the original builders. Unfortunately, after our field trip, the hotel experienced a major fire in the middle of the night on November 14, 2014, forcing closure. By 1889, it had burned three times, so this was the fourth structure-fire, but fortunately did not consume the entire building, which is currently undergoing restoration as a National Historic Landmark. We also saw the result of the Rim Fire, started by a hunter who set an illegal campfire on August 17, 2013 in Stanislaus National Forest. Named for the Rim of the World vista point on Highway 120 as it heads into Yosemite, the fire consumed 257,314 acres making it the third largest wildlife on record in the Sierra Nevada and costing around 127milliontofinallyextinguishwithsmolderingsoilmorethanayearlater.Althoughnohumandied,tenpeoplewereinjuredandover100structuresweredestroyed,alongwithuntoldwildlife,entirestandsofforest,andplants.TheUSFSmadeitahighpriority,fearingitwouldreachYosemiteandthegiantsequoiagroves,butfortunatelythefirestoppedshortofthepark.OnMarch22,attendeesgatheredinGraceCovellHallonPacific2˘7sStocktoncampusforanalldaysymposium.Themorningsessionfocusedonenvironmentaleducation.Afilmby(continuedonpage3)Page1Page2FRIDAY,MARCH21.FieldTriptoCoulterville(JohnMuirGeotourismCenter)AttendeeswillvisitbeautifulsireslinkedtoJohnMuir,especiallytheJohnMuirGeotourismCenter,(feeevent)SATURDAY,MARCH11:WHATHASBEENSAVED,WHATHASBEENLOST:JOHNMUIR2˘7SLEGACY,19142014(BYREGISTRATIONONLY)9:00AM4:45PM,GRACECOVELLHALL,STOCKTONCAMPUSPREREGISTRATIONTHROUGHMARCH18THMORNINGSESSION;WelcomebyPresidentPamelaEibeckJohnMuir2˘7sConnectionwithUniversityofdiePacific,W.R.SwagertyTerryGifford.Muir,RttsJun,UncleSam,PlanetEarthGainsandLossesGrahamWhite,JohnMuir:TheMoralImperativeofEw.TQttmentalEdt11:45LUNCHBUFFET(feeeiAFTERNOONSESSION:2˘7Keynote,AndreaWulf,Cosmos,NatureandtheWebo)life:AleerwnHumboldt2˘7sinfluenceonJohnMi.tr.RonaldEhcr,TheEternalBattleTW˘UmtxessIegacyofJohnMuir.DougScott,/.,ln!Mm(t:BlazingthePathVowardth,1964WildernessA.i[MOAlaskaNationalrnteresiLandsConservationAct2˘7StephenHolmes,Muir2˘7s/iteraryIegacy:ScienceandStorytellingfromThe(alifomiaAlps2˘7toClimate(lhangeieOmmunicatfon.2˘7JohnMuirClassUniversityofthePa3˘ciftc,SummariciofneachprojeciPhotosfromMuirSymposiumIncludingfieldtripsandreception,March2022,2014PhotoscourtesyofBillSwagertyPage3(continuedfrompage1)middleschoolersTylerYoung,KyleWorrallandNickReinhartonJohnMuirandtheYosemitehadallapplauding.YoungisadescendantofMuirandthistributehadMuirHannaFunkfamilymembersespeciallyproudoftheyoungmen2˘7sfilmmakingandnarration.InadditiontoYoung,thefamilywasrepresentedatthesymposiumbyRossandGladysHanna,WilliamandClaudiaHanna,RossandSallydeLipkau,JamesandCarolHanna,SusanandTerryFlynn,DavidandSharonHanna,andRobertHanna.Sincethesymposium,wearesaddenedbythepassingofRossHanna,Muir2˘7slastlivinggrandchild,andagraduateofPacific(2˘749),whodiedinJuneandwhoselifewascelebratedonJune21inhishometownofDixon.Afterthefilm,oldfamiliarstoPacificreturnedtoshareupdatesontheirresearch.TerryGiffordofEnglandreflectedonMuir,Ruskin,UncleSam,PlanetEarthGainsandLosses.GrahamWhiteofScotlandpreachedonTheMoralImperativeofEnvironmentalEducation,usingMuirashissoundingboard.AkeynotebyreturneeAndreaWulf,aGermannationalwholivesinLondon,onAlexandervonHumboldt2˘7sinfluenceonJohnMuirhadallinaweofbothWulf2˘7sresearch,aswellashercommandofimageryanddescription.TheauthorofFoundingGardenersandChasingVenus,Wulf2˘7sTheInventionofNature:AlexandervonHumboldt2˘7sNewWorldwillbereleasedlaterthisspring.ShewillalsoreturntoPacificthiscomingAugusttoaddresstheentirefreshmanclassonAugust25withasummaryofHumboldt2˘7splaceinmodernscience.FollowingaScottishthemeluncheon,whichdidnotincludehaggis,butdidfeatureDundeeCake,registrantsreturnedtotheirseatstoanafternoonsessiononJohnMuir2˘7sLegacy.RonaldEber,historianfortheOregonChapteroftheSierraClubandaresidentofPortOrchard,Washington,ledoffwithremarksonTheWildernessLegacyofJohnMuir,introducedbyHaroldWood,chairoftheSierraClub2˘7sJohnMuirEducationCommittee.DougScottofSeattlefollowed,presentingonThe1964WildernessActand1980AlaskaNationalInterestLandsConservationAct,bothofwhichhehadaroleinpassingasanenvironmentallobbyist.IndependentscholarStephenHolmes,authorofTheYoungJohnMuir:AnEnvironmentalBiography,andaresidentofJamaicaPlain,Massachusetts,comparedMuir2˘7smanuscriptwiththefinalprintedversionofhisfirstmajorbook,TheMountainsofCalifornia(1894)pointingoutmanyenvironmentallessonsthatMuirwantedtoincludethatdidnotmakeitintoprint.ThedayendedwithsevenoftwentyfourinthespringtermJohnMuirClasssummarizingtheirresearchtopics.MeganDeinoresearchedJohnMuirandtheLegacyofCalaverasBigTreesStatePark;HailieEackles,TheBearNecessities,onMuirandbears;LucyKramer:JohnMuir,Sheep,andDomesticHusbandry;KyleShin,MuirandRoosevelt:TheLegacyoftheTriptoYosemite;AshleySalazar:JohnMuirandtheWildernessoftheStickeenRiver;KathrynTeague,JohnMuir2˘7sGlacialTheoriesasPredecessorstoModernUnderstandingoftheGlacialHistoryofYosemiteValley;and,JohnWooten,JohnMuirandtheFightforHetchHetchy.Otherprojectsnotreportedatthesymposiumfollow:LailaAbtahi,JohnMuir2˘7sNaturalEvolutionofArtGwenAlldredge,Muir2˘7sAlaska:ThenandNowZacheryArtozqui,JohnMuirandGlacierBayBrandonChan,JohnMuirandtheRedwoodsEmersonGusto,JohnMuir2˘7sSketchesofTreesintheSierraNevadaChrisHansen,AnAnalysisofJohnMuir2˘7sImpactontheUnderstandingofGlaciersHongPeiLu,JohnMuirandChina:1903,2014JohnImfeld.LongDownfromonHigh:JohnMuir2˘7sImpactonRiparianHabitatsDeanLeonard,JohnMuirandNationalParkServicePolicyinYosemiteShawnQuiruz,Muir2˘7sEncounters:WolvesThenandNowLeslieStirm,JohnMuirandtheSandHillCranesandOtherMigratoryBirdsCooperStivers,JohnMuir2˘7sEducationalGrowth:APsychologicalApproachDylanSvihus,JohnMuirtheAgrarianDustinWilley,Muir2˘7sBotanicalFindingsinYosemiteandToday2˘7sBotanyTrentWilliams,MuirWoods:19082014Page4YosemiteConservancySpringGathering2015ThereisnobetterplacetocelebratethewondersofspringthaninYosemiteValley,surroundedbybloomingdogwoods,rushingwaterfallsandgoodfriends.YosemiteConservancy2˘7sSpringGatheringwasheldonMarch2728,2015.ThefestivitiesbeganwithawelcomereceptiononFridayeveningatYosemiteLodge2˘7sGardenTerraceRoomwithappetizersanddrinks.SaturdayactivitiesincludedguidedwalksbyYosemiteexperts,projecttours,lunchandaspecialreception.Alldonorsof127 million to finally extinguish with smoldering soil more than a year later. Although no human died, ten people were injured and over 100 structures were destroyed, along with untold wildlife, entire stands of forest, and plants. The USFS made it a high priority, fearing it would reach Yosemite and the giant sequoia groves, but fortunately the fire stopped short of the park. On March 22, attendees gathered in Grace Covell Hall on Pacific\u27s Stockton campus for an all-day symposium. The morning session focused on environmental education. A film by (continued on page 3) Page 1 Page 2 FRIDAY, MARCH 21. Field Trip to Coulterville (John Muir Geotourism Center) Attendees will visit beautiful sires linked to John Muir, especially the John Muir Geotourism Center, (fee event) SATURDAY, MARCH 11: WHAT HAS BEEN SAVED, WHAT HAS BEEN LOST: JOHN MUIR\u27S LEGACY, 1914-2014 (BY REGISTRATION ONLY) 9:00 AM - 4:45 PM, GRACE COVELL HALL, STOCKTON CAMPUS PRE-REGISTRATION THROUGH MARCH 18TH MORNING SESSION; * Welcome by President Pamela Eibeck John Muir\u27s Connection with University of die Pacific, W.R. Swagerty * Terry Gifford. Muir, RttsJun, Uncle Sam, Planet Earth Gains and Losses Graham White, John Muir: The Moral Imperative of Ew.TQttmental Edt 11:45 - LUNCH BUFFET (fee ei AFTERNOON SESSION: \u27 Keynote, Andrea Wulf, Cosmos, Nature and the Web o) life: Ale^erwn Humboldt\u27s influence on John Mi.tr. * Ronald Ehcr, The Eternal Battle T\u WUmtxess I egacy of John Muir. Doug Scott, /.,ln! Mm(t: Blazing the Path Voward th, 1964 Wilderness A.-i [MO Alaska National rnteresi Lands Conservation Act \u27 Stephen Holmes, Muir\u27s / iterary I egacy: Science and Storytelling from The ( alifomia Alps\u27 to Climate (lhange i eOmmunicatfon.* \u27John Muir Class- University of the Pa\u3c iftc, Summaric i of n eachprojeci Photos from Muir Symposium Including field trips and reception, March 20-22,2014 Photos courtesy of Bill Swagerty Page 3 (continued from page 1) middle-schoolers Tyler Young, Kyle Worrall and Nick Reinhart on John Muir and the Yosemite had all applauding. Young is a descendant of Muir and this tribute had Muir-Hanna-Funk family members especially proud of the young men\u27s filmmaking and narration. In addition to Young, the family was represented at the symposium by Ross and Gladys Hanna, William and Claudia Hanna, Ross and Sally de Lipkau, James and Carol Hanna, Susan and Terry Flynn, David and Sharon Hanna, and Robert Hanna. Since the symposium, we are saddened by the passing of Ross Hanna, Muir\u27s last living grandchild, and a graduate of Pacific (\u2749), who died in June and whose life was celebrated on June 21 in his home town of Dixon. After the film, old familiars to Pacific returned to share updates on their research. Terry Gifford of England reflected on Muir, Ruskin, Uncle Sam, Planet Earth—Gains and Losses. Graham White of Scotland preached on The Moral Imperative of Environmental Education, using Muir as his sounding board. A keynote by returnee Andrea Wulf, a German national who lives in London, on Alexander von Humboldt\u27s influence on John Muir had all in awe of both Wulf\u27s research, as well as her command of imagery and description. The author of Founding Gardeners and Chasing Venus, Wulf\u27s The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt\u27s New World will be released later this spring. She will also return to Pacific this coming August to address the entire freshman class on August 25 with a summary of Humboldt\u27s place in modern science. Following a Scottish-theme luncheon, which did not include haggis, but did feature Dundee Cake, registrants returned to their seats to an afternoon session on John Muir\u27s Legacy. Ronald Eber, historian for the Oregon Chapter of the Sierra Club and a resident of Port Orchard, Washington, led off with remarks on The Wilderness Legacy of John Muir, introduced by Harold Wood, chair of the Sierra Club\u27s John Muir Education Committee. Doug Scott of Seattle followed, presenting on The 1964 Wilderness Act and 1980 Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act, both of which he had a role in passing as an environmental lobbyist. Independent scholar Stephen Holmes, author of The Young John Muir: An Environmental Biography, and a resident of Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, compared Muir\u27s manuscript with the final printed version of his first major book, The Mountains of California (1894) pointing out many environmental lessons that Muir wanted to include that did not make it into print. The day ended with seven of twenty-four in the spring term John Muir Class summarizing their research topics. Megan Deino researched John Muir and the Legacy of Calaveras Big Trees State Park; Hailie Eackles, The Bear Necessities, on Muir and bears; Lucy Kramer: John Muir, Sheep, and Domestic Husbandry; Kyle Shin, Muir and Roosevelt: The Legacy of the Trip to Yosemite; Ashley Salazar: John Muir and the Wilderness of the Stickeen River; Kathryn Teague, John Muir\u27s Glacial Theories as Predecessors to Modern Understanding of the Glacial History of Yosemite Valley; and, John Wooten, John Muir and the Fight for Hetch Hetchy. Other projects not reported at the symposium follow: Laila Abtahi, John Muir\u27s Natural Evolution of Art Gwen Alldredge, Muir\u27s Alaska: Then and Now Zachery Artozqui, John Muir and Glacier Bay Brandon Chan, John Muir and the Redwoods Emerson Gusto, John Muir\u27s Sketches of Trees in the Sierra Nevada Chris Hansen, An Analysis of John Muir\u27s Impact on the Understanding of Glaciers Hong Pei Lu, John Muir and China: 1903, 2014 John Imfeld. Long Down from on High: John Muir\u27s Impact on Riparian Habitats Dean Leonard, John Muir and National Park Service Policy in Yosemite Shawn Quiruz, Muir\u27s Encounters: Wolves Then and Now Leslie Stirm, John Muir and the Sand Hill Cranes and Other Migratory Birds Cooper Stivers, John Muir\u27s Educational Growth: A Psychological Approach Dylan Svihus, John Muir the Agrarian Dustin Willey, Muir\u27s Botanical Findings in Yosemite and Today\u27s Botany Trent Williams, Muir Woods: 1908-2014 Page 4 Yosemite Conservancy Spring Gathering 2015 There is no better place to celebrate the wonders of spring than in Yosemite Valley, surrounded by blooming dogwoods, rushing waterfalls and good friends. Yosemite Conservancy\u27s Spring Gathering was held on March 27-28, 2015. The festivities began with a welcome reception on Friday evening at Yosemite Lodge\u27s Garden Terrace Room with appetizers and drinks. Saturday activities included guided walks by Yosemite experts, project tours, lunch and a special reception. All donors of 25 or more were invited to attend the Spring Gathering. Donors in the John Muir Heritage Society (with annual gifts of 1,000 or more) were invited to attend a special dinner on Saturday night and additional activities on Sunday. For more information on Yosemite Conservancy, please call 800.469.7275. 6th Annual John Muir Festival May 16, 2015 The John Muir Geotourism Center in Coulter- ville, CA presents the 6th Annual John Muir Festival. A family friendly event! Experience All Things Muir when you visit and learn about Muir\u27s travels along the historic Muir Route along J132 to Yosemite. Meet other John Muir enthusiasts, experts and representatives from the John Muir Geotourism Center, Yosemite National Park and surrounding Yosemite region. On May 16, historic Coulterville celebrates John Muir\u27s historic walks to Yosemite before Yosemite became a National Park. There are multiple venues for family fun—all within the Main Street area of Coulterville. Entertainment, activities and food in Coulterville Park, John Muir Geotourism Center and the Coulter Cafe. Enjoy the historic Yosemite Tapestries exhibit, created by Miriam McNitt, commissioned by Yosemite National Park in 1967 and displayed in the Park for over 40 years. These tapestries depict the natural history of Yosemite as well as panoramic views of the Park\u27s wonders. Entrance is FREE. Festivities began at 10 am and go until 4 pm. John Muir Birthday-Earth Day Celebration *% Saturday, April 18th 2015 4202 Alhambra Avenue (at Highway 4) in Martinez FREE admission! 10 am - 4 pm nd the National Park St-rvice Come rain or shine! Presented by tbe John Muir Association a: r Keynote Speaker Beth Pratl-Bergstrotn, California Director of Ihe National Wildlife Federation Original east members to perform songs from the play,Mountain Days Meet John Mull and the Giant Sequoia he planted 130 years ago Exhibits and activities for everyone Live music And silent auctions John Muir\u27s 1882 Victorian home and orchards John Muir Conservation Awards presented Youth Activities with National Park Service rangers Food and beverages are available for purchase Join the National Park Service to celebrate John Muir\u27s 177th birthday during the annual Birth - day-Earthday event on Saturday, April 18, 2015 from 10 am to 4 pm at the John Muir National Historic Site in Martinez, CA. Participate in fun activities for all ages to commemorate Muir\u27s legacy. Special guest speaker Beth Pratt-Bergstrom, California Director of the National Wildlife Federation, will give the keynote address. The Celebration, held rain or shine, features family-oriented activities, food for sale, live music including a bagpipe band, song performances by original cast members of the play Mountain Days, and displays by national parks and local environmental organizations. Parking and admission are free. National Park Service Ranger Frank Helling will portray John Muir and recount some of Muir\u27s many wilderness adventures. Visitors can enjoy self-guided tours of Muir\u27s historic Italianate Victorian home where he wrote about protecting nature, as well as bid in two silent auctions. Proceeds benefit the John Muir Association, the nonprofit organization hosting the event in partnership with the National Park Service. The Association will also present the 37th annual John Muir Conservation Awards. For more information, please visit www.nps.gov/ jomu/planvourvisit/ directions.htm PAGE 5 Shanna Eller Muir Center Staff Reorganization Since August, 2011, the Office of the President of University of the Pacific has supported an Office of Sustainability, housed within John Muir Center in the College. This past fall Shanna Eller, Director of Sustainability, was named Co-director of Muir Center by Dean Rena Fraden. In addition, Kendra Bruno, M.A., was hired as Sustainability Coordinator. A native of Kansas, Eller has lived in Portland most recently and holds a bachelor\u27s degrees in the History of Art and Architecture, as well as Journalism from the University of Kansas. She earned her master\u27s degree in Urban Planning at the University of Illinois at Chicago and a doctorate in Urban Studies from Portland State University, where she was Director of Community Environmental Services before joining Pacific. Bruno is a graduate of the University of the Pacific with a joint major in International Studies and Spanish. She earned a master\u27s degree in Natural Resources and Peace from the University for Peace, Ciudad Colon, Costa Rica as a Rotary Ambassadorial Scholar. Both Eller and Bruno work closely with administration, faculty, staff, a cadre of students on campus, making Muir Center a lively hub for anything green on the Stockton campus. They co-taught a Pacific Seminar for freshmen in 2014 on the topic of Fair Trade. The Office of Sustainability coordinates, advances and manages sustainability efforts on all three campuses of the University. Activities of the office are described separately in this newsletter. Muir Center continues to sponsor interns and has work-study assistance from undergraduates. David Sriboonreuang, a sophomore English major Kendra Bruno who is also minoring in Religious Studies and Ethnic Studies, has worked in the Center for the past three semesters and is digitizing the slide collection. He has also completed an inventory of the library and the video collection and is one of the chef-demonstrators at the University\u27s new Kitchen Co-op. Recently he showed participants how to make macarons. David Sriboonreuang WkZ •& sa WILDS SCENIC - ^//^^;- A WILI jENIG festival A WILD LIFE Wednesday April 8, 2015 University of the Pacific 3401 Kensington Way, Stockton, CA Biological Sciences Building, Room 101 Free and open to the public * 7:00 pm - 7:30 pm reception with filmmaker Matt Black • •7:30 pm - 8:45 pm films • •Q&A with Matt Black and intermission* •9:15 pm -10:00 pm films • j patagonla Orion ?^-^ Jjjgg 0EARTHJUSTICE U&H Page 6 Things Cooking in the Co-op by Kendra Bruno New at Pacific this year, the Pacific Kitchen Co-op has created quite a stir! Beginning this Spring term, Pacific students, faculty and staff have been able to join as Co-op members allowing them to access a fully equipped kitchen, furnished dining area and delicious classes! The Pacific Kitchen Co-op is a place where members can go to cook their own meals, have a club meeting, have dinner with friends, bake some cookies and simply just enjoy themselves over some delicious home cooked meals. Want to make a cake, but do not have any of the kitchen gadgets needed to do so? The Pacific Kitchen Co-op does - all you have to do is bring your ingredients! Easy to join, the Kitchen Co-op is 35.00 (or 40usingmealplan)persemesterandisopenforreservationseverydayoftheweek,MondaySaturday8AM10PMandSundaysfrom9AM8PM.Recently,theKitchenCoopfeaturedthreeexcitingclassesduringthemonthofFebruary,includingCookingwithCaspero!,SushiWorkshopwithDavid,andaCookieDecoratingClass.EachclassfeaturedaguestcheffromPacificorthelocalcommunity.CookingwithCaspero!hadattendeesupandoutoftheirseatstolearnhowtomakeChileLentilTacoswithanavocadocreamsaucewhilehoningtheirbasicpreppingskills!OnFriday,theCoophostedSushiwithDavidinwhichDavidwentthroughalltheingredientsandprepnecessarytomakeyourownsushiathomefromCaliforniarollstoDragonrolls!Eachattendeewasabletomaketheirownrolls,undertheguidanceofDavid.Lastly,CookieDecoratingfeaturedalocalbakeranddecoratorfromBirdTreatswhotaughttheclasshowtomaketheperfecticinganddecoratesixdifferentcookiesinavarietyofstyles!LearnmoreabouttheKitchenCoopatgo.pacific.edu/Kitchenwhereyoucanfindascheduleofourupcomingprograms,membershipagreementandsomephotosofthespace!Questions?SendusanemailatKitchenCoop@pacific.eduCookingupahealthycommunity!PAGE7DeltaNarrativesProjectCalifornia2˘7sDeltaisthesubjectofacurrentprojectinvolvingPacificfaculty,formerfaculty,andformerDeanRobertBenedetti,whoservesasprojectdirector.FundedbytheStateofCaliforniathroughtheDeltaProtectionCommission,theprojectisbasedatCaliforniaStateUniversity,Sacramento.ThegoalistostudytheDeltaincollaborationwiththeregion2˘7shistoricalsocieties,museums,andarchivesinordertopromotebetterawarenessofthearea,ultimatelyexpectingnominatingbytheDepartmentoftheInteriorasaNationalHeritageArea.FormerEnglishDepartmentfacultymemberGreggCamfield,nowanAssociateProvostatU.C.Merced,isinchargeofLiteratureandArt,whilePhilipGaroneandJenniferHelzerofCaliforniaStateUniversity,StanislausaretacklingReclamationandRestorationandCommunityandSociety,respectfully.Theleadessay,StitchingaRiverCulture:Trade,CommunicationandTransportation,isbeingwrittenbyBillSwagertyandReubenSmithDr.SmithisformerDeanoftheGraduateSchoolatPacificandBillSwagertyandReubenSmithprofessoremeritusoftheDepartmentofHistory.AnativeCalifornian,SmithgrewupintheBayareaandearnedhisdoctorateatHarvardUniversity,specializingintheIslamicWorld.HeknowsDeltatransportationhistoryfromyearsofworkingasavolunteerattheWesternRailwayMuseuminRioVista,wherehecontinuestoserveasmotormanandconductoronelectrictrains.SwagertyandSmithbegantheprojectinOctoberandhavecompletedadraftoftheiressayaftertripstoseveralhistoricalsocietiesandarchivesincludingtheWesternRailroadMuseumarchives,CenterforSacramentoHistory,StateRailroadMuseumArchives,RioVistaMuseum,SacramentoRiverDeltaHistoricalSocietyinWalnutGrove,YoloCountyArchivesinWoodland,andSanJoaquinHistoricalSocietyinMickeGrove.OtherpartnersintheprojectincludetheBankofStocktonandtheHagginMuseumofStockton.PresentationofresultshavetakenplacethisspringinWalnutGroveandAntiochandwillbepresentedlaterthissummerinSacramentowithexpectationsofnewinterestintheDeltaassitesareinterpretedandmuseumsopentheirdoorswithnewexhibits..rV.2˘7U£,l2˘7T»oi..,■•......§:40 using meal plan) per semester and is open for reservations every day of the week, Monday - Saturday 8 AM - 10 PM and Sundays from 9 AM - 8 PM. Recently, the Kitchen Co-op featured three exciting classes during the month of February, including Cooking with Caspero!, Sushi Workshop with David, and a Cookie Decorating Class. Each class featured a guest chef from Pacific or the local community. Cooking with Caspero! had attendees up and out of their seats to learn how to make Chile - Lentil Tacos with an avocado cream sauce while honing their basic prepping skills! On Friday, the Co-op hosted Sushi with David in which David went through all the ingredients and prep necessary to make your own sushi at home - from California rolls to Dragon rolls! Each attendee was able to make their own rolls, under the guidance of David. Lastly, Cookie Decorating featured a local baker and decorator from Bird Treats who taught the class how to make the perfect icing and decorate six different cookies in a variety of styles! Learn more about the Kitchen Co-op at go.pacific.edu/Kitchen where you can find a schedule of our upcoming programs, membership agreement and some photos of the space! Questions? Send us an email at [email protected] Cooking up a healthy community! PAGE 7 Delta Narratives Project California\u27s Delta is the subject of a current project involving Pacific faculty, former faculty, and former Dean Robert Benedetti, who serves as project director. Funded by the State of California through the Delta Protection Commission, the project is based at California State University, Sacramento. The goal is to study the Delta in collaboration with the region\u27s historical societies, museums, and archives in order to promote better awareness of the area, ultimately expecting nominating by the Department of the Interior as a National Heritage Area. Former English Department faculty member Gregg Camfield, now an Associate Provost at U. C. Merced, is in charge of Literature and Art, while Philip Garone and Jennifer Helzer of California State University, Stanislaus are tackling Reclamation and Restoration and Community and Society, respectfully. The lead essay, Stitching a River Culture: Trade, Communication and Transportation, is being written by Bill Swagerty and Reuben Smith Dr. Smith is former Dean of the Graduate School at Pacific and Bill Swagerty and Reuben Smith professor emeritus of the Department of History. A native Californian, Smith grew up in the Bay area and earned his doctorate at Harvard University, specializing in the Islamic World. He knows Delta transportation history from years of working as a volunteer at the Western Railway Museum in Rio Vista, where he continues to serve as motorman and conductor on electric trains. Swagerty and Smith began the project in October and have completed a draft of their essay after trips to several historical societies and ar chives including the Western Railroad Museum archives, Center for Sacramento History, State Railroad Museum Archives, Rio Vista Museum, Sacramento River Delta Historical Society in Walnut Grove, Yolo County Archives in Woodland, and San Joaquin Historical Society in Micke Grove. Other partners in the project include the Bank of Stockton and the Haggin Museum of Stockton. Presentation of results have taken place this spring in Walnut Grove and Antioch and will be presented later this summer in Sacramento with expectations of new interest in the Delta as sites are interpreted and museums open their doors with new exhibits. .^**r ■V.\u27 U£,l \u27 —T » oi.., ■•* ... ... **§ ■ : iffijJM mu.V; \u27 .; k ■•.\u27- .\u27■. » H»\u27\u27|FkftjfeB i.uiiWK TAP i HOI st 1 \u3e- jl£X a LifililAaaia Patch BDH ■ ■ -A Clarksburg f\u27.li 4 Mues |\u3e.r\u3c| i \u27\u27*B^BI 1 giMU »\u3e»K , \u27 -■ \u27J kj, IM:W \u27 jJ&T %is««ii^fHB^ 3 Signs near Freeport Page 8 John Muir Journal Transcription Project Picking Up Steam In the wake of the 100th anniversary of John Muir\u27s death on December 24, 2014, The Record (Stockton) ran an article - front page above the fold - about the Special Collections effort to crowdsource the transcription of the John Muir journals. The story was picked up by other newspapers and a couple of television stations, and it was tweeted copiously over the next few weeks. The publicity brought in over 30 new transcribers who dove into Muir journals with the same drive that Muir sojourned in the Sierra. Nearly 100 images have been transcribed, which means that well over half the 3000 images in the journals are now keyword searchable. The transcribers are devoted Muir enthusiasts digging for new inspirational quotes, long time hikers curious about Muir\u27s wanderings on their favorite paths around the world, and grade school students who giggle when Muir discusses the naked rocks, but were awestruck when he pondered the value of scientific inquiry. The long term value to harvesting Muir\u27s words in the journals will boost the discovery of the famous naturalist\u27s ideas and thoughts in their initial observational form. The project continues. If you would like to take a crack at connecting with Muir, there are still plenty of pages to go. Visit go.pacific.edu/ muirwords and get started. has served the Special Collections for 10 years and has worked at Pacific since 1999. Nicole Grady is our newly minted Special Collections Librarian after serving three years as a temporary librarian. Nicole will continue to process collections, create exhibits, and

    The John Muir Newsletter, Winter 2010/2011

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    Page 1 transcription missing PAGE 2 John Muir Back and Newsletter Going Digital After a year, we are back! Last year we announced that we would become an occasional newsletter, projecting two issues per year. We only released one issue this past year. In an age of high cost of reproduction and mailing we have decided to follow the trail of other newsletters by going digital. Those with e mail can continue to receive at no charge the newsletter as part of a web serve list. Simply e mail us at [email protected] and we will include you in our future announcements and you will receive a PdF version of the Newsletter. Those who do not have web access, please send us a short note requesting a hard copy of the Newsletter. We suggest a donation of 10peryearforthosewhowouldliketheolderformatasahardcopy.Wearenolongerremindingsubscribersofapendingexpiration.WeappreciateanyandallsupportoftheCenter.YourdonationhelpswithmanyCenteragendas.WecontinuetowelcomesubmissionsofarticlesfocusingonJohnMuirandhislegacy,aswellaspoetryandphotosoftheSierraandotherplacesdeartoJohnMuir2˘7sheart.Articlesshouldbenolongerthan2,000words;butwealsoseekshortpiecesandannouncements.Pleasesubmitto:W.R.SwagertyDirector,JohnMuirCenter,WPC99UniversityofthePacific,StocktonCA95211orbyemailtowswagertv@pacific.eduJaiyaEllis,SustainabilityCoordinatorfortheUniversity2˘7sthreecampuses,withhercentralofficeinMuirCenter261110 per year for those who would like the older format as a hard copy. We are no longer reminding subscribers of a pending expiration. We appreciate any and all support of the Center. Your donation helps with many Center agendas. We continue to welcome submissions of articles focus ing on John Muir and his legacy, as well as poetry and photos of the Sierra and other places dear to John Muir\u27s heart. Articles should be no longer than 2,000 words; but we also seek short pieces and announcements. Please submit to: W. R. Swagerty Director, John Muir Center, WPC99 University of the Pacific, Stockton CA 95211 or by e mail to [email protected] Jaiya Ellis, Sustainability Coordinator for the University\u27s three campuses, with her central office in Muir Center 26-11 nln 1 869: OYamhte, to tne AMmmll al JlLount Jy^olLmxxAt, eX&Q&n tnauAana LeeX, nian, tne, hiatve&t paint in wle. 6, iawun&n nvn LeeX, natie. net taucnea. From Mount Hoffman John Muir My First Summer in the Sierra By Terry G if ford Your \u27ramble\u27 up from the Valley To spend a night on this bare mountain, A steep ascent of five thousand feet, Left me breathless before I turned the page. And even starting from Snow Flat I was pleased to pause on a real chair (My first in weeks of boulder- seats) Left outside by the tree-stump table Amongst the cabins of May Lake Camp. Breathless from the final scramble And the view, looking down on Half Dome, Cloud\u27s Rest, far glaciers and Tenaya Lake, I sit quite still and meet the marmots Smiling eerily like cats as they creep Out from their crevices, expecting to be fed. Disgusted by these half-tame summit pets I turn and scree-slide down the dusty trail To bathe my legs in the clear May Lake. From: Terry Gifford, Reconnecting with John Muir (Athens: The University of Georgia Press, 2006), p. 131. John Muir Event at Pacif April 13 On April 13, 2011, a special John Mur event will be held in the Janet Leigh Theater at University of the Pacific. From 7:00 to 7:30 p.m. photographer Scot Miller will give a presentation on his work in the illustration of the 100th anniversary edition of My First Summer in the Sierra. From 7:30 until 9:15 p.m., film maker Catherine Tatge of Global Village Media will give a brief introduction to her film John Muir in the New World . This is a biographical documentary of the extraordinary life of John Muir and his influence on American history. The 90 minute film, which is sched uled to be broadcast on the PBS American Masters series on April 18, will be shown after Ms. Tatge\u27s introduction. From 9:15 until 10:00 p.m. there will be a reception and book signing by Scot Miller. Page 3 Mike Wurtz In the archives 2010 Online Inventory of Muir Papers is Updated By Michael Wurtz Holt-Atherton Special Collections University of the Pacific Library Recently, the staff of the Holt-Atherton Special Collections had announced the addition of thousands of John Muir correspondence to the web - library.pacific.edu/ha/muir and click on digitized material. This was added to images of Muir\u27s drawings, photographs, and journals. These digital assets have been a tremendous help to researchers around the world. However, there is still much of the collection that is not available online. Digitally scanning and loading the entirety of John Muir Papers and other collections would be a daunting task, so only the most useful and significant items are made available via the web at this time. In addition to all the new online material, we have updated the John Muir Papers finding aid. A finding aid, sometimes referred to as a finding guide, could be considered an inventory, table of contents, index, and annotated bibliography all in one. Collections that are the size and scope of the Muir Papers cannot be easily itemized. Atypical six inch box can hold over a thousand individual documents. To list and describe each of those items would take a great deal of time. Archivists have chosen to organize collections along the lines of what the creator (in this case, John Muir) intended. Once we have created the categories (such as letters, drawings, published materials, etc.) we describe them in slightly more specific terms, such as by date or location or subject. Then the researcher must request the items by folder or box. The online material represents the richest portion of the John Muir Papers. However, it is a minority of all the Muir material. The microform project that was completed in the 1980s includes much more of the collection, but still not every item. The entire collection resides at Holt- Atherton Special Collections in the University of the Pacific Library. How can the researcher find out about what is in the materials that are not accessible via the web or microform? The online finding aid is the answer. It lists the contents to every folder in the collection. For example, researchers will find that the Papers contain most of the collected bibliography of Muir as listed in Kimes\u27 John Muir: A Reading Bibliography. They will also find photographs that have been donated to the collection since the microform project was completed. In addition, the collection includes Muir biographer William F. Bade\u27s transcriptions of many of Muir\u27s Journals, as well as Bade\u27s collected reminiscences, and personal letters. One can also find Linnie Marsh Wolfe\u27s correspondence and papers as she wrote her biography of Muir, and her transcriptions of some of Muir journals. Papers from the Strenzel and Muir family including legal and business papers for the Muir ranch in Martinez are also available. There is also poetry to and about Muir; John Muir\u27s clipping files that he kept on many different topics and memorabilia that includes Muir\u27s odds and ends such as passenger lists, maps and botanical information from trips he took around the world. Researchers can also find a few real jewels within the John Muir Papers that have never made it to microform or online including photographs of construction of the Half Dome Cables Trail in 1919 and clippings on early California agriculture that were probably collected by Muir and his father-in-law, John Strentzel. To get to the finding aid for the John Muir Papers, visit library.pacific.edu/ha/muir/find and click on Finding Aid of the John Muir Papers. From the above website, researchers are invited to click on Related Collections. Here, researchers can see over a dozen finding aids to other Muir related collections that the University of the Pacific Library holds. Page 4 Charles E. Swann\u27s Military Map of Kentucky and Tennessee www.davidrumsey.com &heJve, \A nathlna, nuyce, eXaauenl in. JLatwie, than a nvoumXain fivtteam, ana Void, id, tne, Ia/iaI s eXleA, daw.. . . (continued from page 1) Muir\u27s choices of routes, and through comparison to modern maps. Some of the maps examined were George Woolworth Colton\u27s 1869 Map of Kentucky and Tennessee, 9 A.J. Johnson\u27s 1866 Map of Kentucky and Tennessee, 10 as well as all the relevant, internet- available maps from the collections of the Library of Congress11, the David Rumsey collection of historical maps12, and the historical map archive of the University of Alabama.13 These comparisons show that the best available map from the era of Muir\u27s walk is Charles E. Swann\u27s 1863 Military Map of Kentucky and Tennessee. 14 Also valuable because it gives the names and characteristics of roads, is N. Michler\u27s 1862 Map of Middle and East Tennessee.15 The 1863 map Mountain Region of North Carolina and Tennessee by W. L. Nicholson and A. Lindenkohl16 has almost twice the scale and was useful for confirming the previous two maps. Finally, the General Topographical Map by Julius Bien & Co. was issued by the United States War Department in 1895, but it was part of an Atlas to Accompany the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, 1861- 1865 and seems to show features as they existed in 1865, not 1895. Sheet XV is the relevant map.17 None of these maps show features with the accuracy and scale with which we are familiar today. None of them show elevation contours; however the General Topographical Map of Julius Bien mentioned above depicts mountain- David Rumsey Map Collection r.........,n, I ous terrain through the use of hachures. The earliest maps that would today be considered topographic maps are the 30 minute quadrangles18 issued by the US Geological Survey in the 1890s. These were surveyed two or three decades after Muir\u27s walk, so they need to be used judiciously and in connection with the Civil War- era maps. Reconstructing the route In order to reconstruct Muir\u27s probable route, A Thousand Mile Walk to the Gulf and Muir\u27s journal for the trip were searched for geographical clues, then a reasonable route was traced out on Civil War-era maps. That information was then transferred to topographical maps from the 1890s, and then transferred to modern maps. The result of this process has been recorded on Google maps.19 To see this map, go to http:// maps.google.com/ Click on search options. On the drop-down menu, select User-created maps. Type in John Muir Cumberland. Click on search maps. Then click on John Muir\u27s Crossing of the Cumberland to see Muir\u27s route and places visited along the way. This process is for the most part easier than it sounds, and while it cannot be and does not pretend to be exact, most individuals performing the process would come up with a very similar route; however a researcher possessing detailed local historical and geographical knowledge could probably improve the end result. According to Muir\u27s journal and A Thousand Mile Walk to the Gulf, Muir passed through Burkesville, Kentucky on September 8. He (i.nriivil inttncjf.-Tphk.-il m,sp. Sh^r-1 XV. lull us Hkn A Co.r I itfe.., \.Y. (EH\u27J] ifw:*) The author found this map of the Cumberland drawn in 1895, but represents this area from the Civil War, to have provided the most detail of that area from the time that Muir passed through. (captured from the David Rumsey Map Collection website) page 5 Google rn a PS John Muir Cumborl and Search Maps 6M Cmrtiom UlMUX Save 1oM» Mans Jolin Muir\u27s Crossln-g of Hie Cumberland My cost estimation ti4 ihe route t aken b| John Muir when he crossad tho Cumberland Plateau on 10.11, and 12 September 1 ST. Thw was pan of Mun\u27i wilh horn Lour*rfle. Kairtiicky.to Cedar h\u3ejr. Fkwde. 0\u3es.cnfced ^ Ins boor: *A Thousand-Mae Walk To 1h* GuT Red poioLert re-piesert towns v.s*ed bj Mini. Qfue\u3e poeTtera iapres*nl ailee to w* too ** to 901 b tew* of what Muir saw in 1867 Map by Dan Si yei. 7Z eiawa - Publ ic C» *!»d on Aug 38.2QB - Updated Mat 31 By Dan Slyer PM* Ineirtip-Will* tHrtrt»nt fftjftaaili KY Mun pasted through on 8 Septeenoir 1967 tjaraeslawn. 1H Muir passed through on 10 Seplerribe r 1887. ftnonuoirion. TH Howe ghost Irjwn Hur passed through in Che fflafleee] ol 17 Senteenbei 1967 t Kingston TN Mlui tie (Bit ten the night, of 1? Senlembar 1867 / Mull\u27. Wllle tnybesl eetlnwiion of the roule liken by John Mue wSoo ha ciassed the Cnmberland Placeau on 10. 11. and 12 Seplernoor 1867. This best eelmiatBd mule mosltp follows moderrt-datr roaoH, tot or places (a tf\u27T\u27 \u27 Blurts, rocknSut*s, natoril avclves. fpapa Cmk Sale Malum fraa 5tal* Natuul Area Jkichee and watereat* In Ihe 1356 Wwibuig (uadranuje, this lit! was called simply The Wideirwss 5 John Muir Cgmbe dand The author posted this user-created map of John Muir\u27s 1867 route through the Cumberland on Google maps. The map includes clickable points with information and photographs of places that Muir had visited. Instructions for finding this map online are included in the article. crossed the state line into Tennessee towards evening 20 on September 9. The next day, after a few miles of level ground 21 Muir walked upgrade with occasional views in which Kentucky was grandly seen 22 for six or seven hours 23 to reach the top of the Cumberland Plateau. He passed through Jamestown and as previously mentioned, spent the night with a blacksmith and his wife. On September 11 he walked a long stretch of level sandstone plateau 24 and was compelled to sleep with the trees in the one great bedroom of the open night. 25 Finally, on September 12 Muir breakfasted in Montgomery and descended the east slope of the Cumberland Mountains. He forded the Clinch 26 and reached Kingston before dark. 27 The Civil War-era maps show several routes from Burkesville to Jamestown, but the most direct route, the route that would be more in Kentucky than in Tennessee,28 the only route that would give a view north to Kentucky while climbing the plateau, and the only route that is level until one long steady climb to the top of the plateau, is the route through Albany, Kentucky and Pall Mall, Tennessee. In the author\u27s opinion, the only plausible ^oute from Jamestown to Montgomery is the Pile Turnpike. Montgomery, now a ghost town but then the Morgan County Seat, was then located on the upper reaches of Emory River, just west of Wartburg. From Montgomery to Kingston, the only practicable route is east through Wartburg, then branching southeast at Crooked Fork and proceeding northeast of Bitter Creek. This road reaches Emory Iron Works on the watercourse variously known as Emory Creek, or Little Emory Creek, or Little Emory River (its modern name). This route then descends through a gap in Wal- den Ridge on the left bank of the Little Emory, and finally fords the Emory and Clinch Rivers in the lowlands east of the plateau. In the text of A Thousand-Mile Walk to the Gulf, the eloquent... mountain stream 29 crossed by Muir on September 12 is identified parenthetically as the Emory River. However the mountain stream is unnamed in his journal. The gorge of the Emory River, as it descends from the plateau, is so rugged that no road followed it in 1867 and no road follows it even today. The author asserts that the name was inserted incorrectly either by Muir or by editor William Frederic Bade long after the trip,30 and that the eloquent mountain stream is actually the Little Emory River. JLe Page 6 A y^/^ •&&** w \u27*ZSZ~L^M~ —S5 PAGE 7 Cystopteris (bladder fern) One of the plants mentioned by Muir From: luirig.altervista.org seat of Jamestown. Indeed, even today the telephone book shows that there are three households named Livingston in Jamestown. And all of them live near the author\u27s estimated route south of downtown Jamestown! At this point the author reached a dead end toward a solution of the blacksmith question, as many Fentress County records were lost during a 1905 courthouse fire. However, a determined seeker armed with local records and local knowledge might be able to uncover more. A visit today In his thousand-mile walk, Muir sought out the wildest, leafiest, and least trodden way I could find. 34 The geographical route Muir took is no longer particularly wild, leafy, or untrodden. Anyone wishing to recreate Muir\u27s journey will need to take side trips away from Muir\u27s geographical route to glimpse his spiritual route through the wild, the leafy, and the least trodden. John Muir\u27s Crossing of the Cumberland 35 suggests more than two dozen sites to visit, from waterfalls to overlooks to springs to virgin forests. It is interesting to note that the thousand- mile route taken by Muir is not the route taken by the present-day John Muir Trail, which runs for 42 miles in the Cumberland Plateau through Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area and adjoining Pickett State Forest. Nor is it the route taken by the John Muir National Recreation Trail, which runs for 21 miles along the north bank of Hiwassee River within Cherokee National Forest in eastern Tennessee. These two trails were named to acknowledge Muir as an early naturalist walker in the area, not to recreate his precise route. Acknowledgement The author is grateful for the help of Willie R. Beaty, President of the Fentress County Historical Society in Jamestown, Tennessee, who suggested some profitable avenues of investigation. Also to Wil Reding of Kalamazoo, Michigan who with his wife Sarah Reding retraced the thousand-mile walk route on 5 May to 25 June 2006, suggested improvements to a late draft of this article. ENDNOTES 1. Digitized images of Muir\u27s notebooks are available through http://librarv.pacific.edu/ha/ digital/muiriournals/muiriournals.asp See journal number 1, images 9 through 13. 2. John Muir, A Thousand-Mile Walk to the Gulf, ed. William Frederic Bade (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1916). Reprinted in John Muir, The Wilderness Journeys, ed. with introduction by Graham White (Edinburgh: Canon- gate Classics, 1996) 3. Ibid., (1916), p. 17; (1996), ed. White, p. 9. 4. Ibid., (1916), p. 22; (1996), ed. White, p. 11. 5. Ibid., (1916), p. 29; (1996), ed. White, p. 14. 6. Bonnie Johanna Gisel, ed., Kindred and Related Spirits: The Letters of John Muir and Jeanne C. Carr, (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 2001), pp. 57-59. 7. Muir, op. cit., (1916), p. 15; (1996), ed. White p. 8. 8. Ibid., (1916), p. 30; (1996), ed. White, p. 15. Muir\u27s Houghton-Mifflin editor, William Frederick Bade identified the river in brackets as [Emory River]. 9. George Woolworth Colton\u27s 1869 Map of Kentucky and Tennessee (scale 1:1,584,000) is available through http://alabamamaps.ua.edu/historicalmaps/ us states/kentuckv/index.html It shows a road running from Montgomery, Tennessee to Kingston, Tennessee, along the west bank of the Emory River. The road shown on this map supposedly crossed Obed\u27s River just before that river joins with Emery\u27s River. Modern names for these rivers are Obed River and Emory River. Modern maps show that this supposed road would have to descend a 400-foot cliff to reach the Obed and then immediately ascend a 400-foot cliff on the other side. Colton\u27s map also shows Clear Creek emptying into the Obed upstream of Daddy\u27s Creek, whereas modern maps show that the reverse is correct. No other map of that era shows this road. 10. A.J. Johnson\u27s 1866 Map of Kentucky and Tennessee (scale 1:1,521,000) is available at the same web site listed in note #9. It shows a road direct from Kingston, Tennessee to Madisonville, Tennessee. 11. http://memorv.loc.gov/ammem/gmdhtml/ gmdhome.html 12. http://www.davidrumsey.com/ 13. http://alabamamaps.ua.edu/ historicalmaps/index.html 14. Charles E. Swann, Military Map of Kentucky and Tennessee, 1863, scale 1:350.000 Available throughhttp:// www.davidrumsey.com/maps2433.html http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.gmd/g3951s.cs0216800 no tonxx^A, •pa/i/tiou.- ta/ttu, -\\kia, tWtXu-, qa, unviaOG^n. Had Muirwalked this same route 143 years after he did, he would have plenty of food options. This Hardee\u27s fast food restaurant on the Knoxville Highway in Wartburg, TN is probably only a few steps off the thousand mile walk to the Gulf. (Used with permission from the Fisherman\u27s Quartet website http:// thefishermansquartet.com November 18,2010 Page 8 Schrankia, (sensitive briar) One of the plants mentioned by Muir kansasnativeplantsociety.org 15. N. Michler, Map of Middle and East Tennessee, 1862, scale 1:235,000. Available through http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.gmd/ g3962t.cws00162 16. W.L Nicholson and A. Lindenkohl, Mountain Region of North Carolina and Tennessee, 1863, scale 1:633,600. Available through http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.gmd/g3900.cw0053000 17. Julius Bien & Co., General Topographical Map, sheet XV, United States War Department, 1895. Scale 1:633,600. Available through http://www.davidrumsev.com/detail?id=l-l- 26982-1100281 18. These U.S. Geological Survey 30 minute quadrangles (scale 1:125,000) are relevant: Wartburg, Tennessee, Edition of Mar. 1896. Topography by A.E. Murlin. Surveyed in 1893. Briceville, Tennessee, Edition of July 1896. Topography by J.F. Knight and E.C. Barnard. Surveyed in 1888-91. Loudon, Tennessee, Edition of Oct. 1895. Topography by F.M. Pearson 1884-5. Topography by C.E. Cooke 1891. Kingston, Tennessee, Edition of Mar. 1891. Topography by F.M. Pearson. Surveyed in 1884-5. Available through http://alabamamaps.ua.edu/historicalmaps/ us_states/tennessee/topos/30mintopos.html 19. John Muir\u27s Crossing of the Cumberland. Available through http://maps.google.com/ Search User-created maps for John Muir Cumberland. 20. Muir, op. cit, (1916), p. 15; (1996), ed. White, p. 7. 21. Ibid., (1916), 22. Ibid., (1916) 23. Ibid., (1916). 24. Ibid. 25. Ibid., p. 15. 26. Ibid., 27. Ibid.. (1916), (1916), p. 16; (1996), ed. White, p. 7. p. 16; (1996), ed. White, p. 8. p. 16; (1996), ed. White, p. 8. p. 26; (1996), ed. White, p.13. pp. 29-30; (1996), ed. White, (1916), p. 31; (1996), ed. White, p.16. (1916), p. 32; (1996), ed. White, p.16. 28. About 25 miles in Kentucky and 10 miles in Tennessee, to the base of the plateau at Pall Mall. 29. Muir, op. cit, (1916), p. 30; (1996), ed. White, p. 15. 30. Although most of A Thousand-Mile Walk to The Gulf is a journal, wr

    The John Muir Newsletter, Spring 2014 Special Symposium Edition

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    Page 1 transcription missing Page 2 (continued from page 1) was founding Director of the Edinburgh\u27s Environment Center, which pioneered environmental education in Scotland from 1979 until 2001. In the 1980s he served on the Education Committee of the John Muir Trust in Scotland and in 1986, proposed that a John Muir Award should be established by the Trust in the UK as a national scheme for people of all ages; over 150,000 people have now completed the Award in the UK. He is author/ editor of: The Scottish Environmental Handbook; The Nature of Scotland - Landscape Wildlife and People; John Muir- Journeys in the Wilderness; John Muir; From Scotland to the Sierra; Sacred Summits-John Muir\u27s Greatest Climbs. As a beekeeper and conservationist, he has devoted much of the last eight years to campaigning against the global use of neonicotinoid pesticides, widely held to be responsible for the deaths of over ten million bee colonies in the United States, and for the deaths of uncountable millions of birds, amphibians and other pollinating insects. He was very involved in the campaign to get these neurotoxic pesticides banned in the twenty- seven countries of the European Union, which came into effect in December 2013; they remain legal in the USA where they are used on over 200 million acres of corn, soybeans, canola, wheat, potatoes and fruit. 11:45 Lunch Buffet (a fee event; see registration form) 12:30 Keynote, Andrea Wulf, Cosmos, Nature and the Web of Life. Alexander von Humboldt\u27s influence on John Muir. Andrea Wulf was born India, moved to Germany as a child, and now lives in Britain. She is the author of several books. Her book The Brother Gardeners. Botany, Empire and the Birth of an Obsession won the American Horticultural Society 2010 Book Award and was long-listed for the Samuel Johnson Prize 2008, the most prestigious non-fiction award in the UK. The Founding Gardeners. The Revolutionary Generation, Nature, and the Shaping of the American Nation was published under great acclaim in spring 2011 and made it on the New York Times Best Seller List. Andrea has written for many newspapers including the Guardian, the LA Times and the New York Times. She was the Eccles British Library Writer in Residence 2013 and a three-time fellow of the International Center for Jefferson Studies at Monticello. She is also appears regularly NPR in the US, and on radio and TV programmes on the BBC in the UK. She currently working on a book called \u27The Invention of Nature\u27 about Alexander von Humboldt and his influence on scientists, thinkers and poets (published by Knopf in late 2015). 1:30 PM Ronald Eber, The Eternal Battle - The Wilderness Legacy of John Muir. Ronald Eber is Historian for the Oregon Chapter of the Sierra Club. He has held many Sierra Club positions including National Campus Coordinator in 1971 and Chair and Wilderness Coordinator of the Oregon Chapter from 1980 -1985. He has written two previous essays for this conference entitled John Muir and the Pioneer Conservationists of the Pacific Northwest and Wealth and Beauty - John Muir and Forest Conservation that were published in the conference proceedings. He currently lives near Port Gamble, Washington. 2:20 Doug Scott, John Muir: Blazing the Path Toward the 1964 Wilderness Act and 1980 Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act. Doug Scott worked for forty years as a lobbyist and strategist persuading Congress to designate additional wilderness areas. He is proudest of his leadership role in the campaign for the historic Alaska National Interest lands Act of 1980. He is the author of The Enduring Wilderness: Preserving our Natural Heritage through the Wilderness Act (Fulcrum 2004) and Our Wilderness: America\u27s Common Ground (Fulcrum 2009), and of Wild Thoughts, a collection of excerpts of great writing about nature, wilderness, and the people who love them (forthcoming). 3:00 Stephen Holmes, Muir\u27s Cultural Legacy: Science and Storytelling from \u27The California Alps\u27 to Climate Change Communication Steven Pavlos Holmes, Ph.D., is an independent scholar of the environmental humanities, with a special interest in the emotional, ethical, and spiritual dimensions of our interactions with the natural world. He is the author of The Young John Muir: An Environmental Biography (winner of the Modern Language Association\u27s Prize for Independent Scholars) and of A Healing Landscape: Environmental and Social History of Mass Audubon\u27s Boston Nature Center and most recently editor of Facing the Change: Personal Encounters with Global Warming (Torrey House Press, 2013). He has taught at Harvard University and at the Cambridge (Mass.) Center for Adult Education. He lives with his partner Carlene Pavlos and their cat Millet in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. 3:45-4:30 John Muir Class University of the Pacific. Six students chosen from the twenty-six in Pacific\u27s University-level course focusing on John Muir\u27s World: the Origins of the Conservation Movement will summarize their research project connecting Muir with legacy people and places. 4:30-4:45 Wrap Up. 5:00-6:00 PM. Reception, University Library Page 3 X Registration Form 60th California History Institute, University of the Pacific What we have seated; what we have lost: John Muir\u27s Legacy, 1914-2014 March 2122, 2014 March 21 Field Trip to Coulte nolle aid John Muir Highway with program at John MuirGeotourism Center aid lunch in Coulterville. Bus tour; 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM; Storer Coach leaves UOP Sirjimining Pool parking lot at 9:00 aid returns by 5 PM. Name Me al preference: Vegetarian Vegan Carnivore Cost 35.00SpecialNeeds:March22SymposiuminGraceCovellHall,UOPPreregistration(perperson)Cost35.00 Special Needs: March 22 Symposium in Grace Covell Hall, UOP Pre-registration (per person) Cost 35.00 Student rate (high school or college) 25.00 Includes coffee/tea/seones; luncheon buffet; & reception (Cost at the door or after March IS will be 40; $30 for students) Name Affiliation Affiliation Address: Contact: (e mail please) Total Please send this form and a check in U. S. dollars to John Muir Center/WPC 99 University of the Pacific/Stockton/CA 95211 SIGN UP FOR THE ELECTRONIC VERSION BY CONTACTING: THE JOHN MUIR CENTER University of the Pacific 3601 Pacific Avenue Stockton, California 95211 ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED -T~ ~r ~r -j. . i V rv \u3eV- ^ The John Mu Center The John Muir Center promotes the study of John Muir and environmental- ism at the University of the Pacific and beyond. Center Objectives As one of California\u27s most important historical figures, John Muir (1838- 1914) was a regional naturalist with global impact. His papers, housed in the library\u27s Holt-Atherton Special Collections, are among the University\u27s most important resources for scholarly research. Recognizing the need both to encourage greater utilization of the John Muir Papers by the scholarly community, and the need to promote the study of California and its impact upon the global community, the John Muir Center was established in 1989 with the following objectives: • To foster a closer academic relationship between Pacific and the larger community of scholars, students and citizens interested in regional and environmental studies. • To provide greater opportunities for research and publication by Pacific faculty and students. • To offer opportunities for out-of- classroom learning experiences. • To promote multi-disciplinary curricular development. Phone: 209.946.2527 Fax: 209.946.2318 E-mail: [email protected]://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmn/1095/thumbnail.jp

    Letter from John Muir [Other] to John Muir, 1885 May 22.

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    JOHN MUIRDealer in Groceries, Fruits and vegetables1425 San Pablo Avenue,Oakland, Cal., May 22, \u2785.Mr, Muir,Dear Sir:I have been having some of your cherries, and the name of John Muir is really a scarce name, so I thought I would write you a few lines to see if you were any relation of mine. I was born in Renfrew Shair near Glasgow in Scotland at a little place called Busby. My father\u27s name was Walter , a farmer at the above named place, and did not know whether you were any relation or not. If you are I would like to hear from you, if it is convenient for you to write to me, or if you were to come and see me I would be glad to see you, or any one of my name, I had a good many relations around there, but it is a long time since I left there. Be pleased to answer this at your earliest convenience, and oblige,Your humble servant, John Muir[Letter marked, Other John Muirs and contained in folder marked, other Muirs or supposed relatives. ]https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmcl/36004/thumbnail.jp

    The John Muir Newsletter, Spring/Summer 2012

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    Page 1 transcription missing PAGE 2 \u27Women as History-Makers In California Symposium The 59th California History Institute was held this past March at University of the Pacific. This year\u27s theme was Women as History-Makers in California. The event was planned and co- organized by Edith Sparks (Senior Associate Dean of the College), Jennifer Hel- gren, Assistant Professor of History, Corrie Martin, Director of the Women\u27s Resource Center, and W. Swa- gerty, Director of the John Muir Center. On Friday, March 23, twenty students and faculty motored to Sacramento to tour the California Museum. Exhibits on California\u27s Remarkable Women, Women and the Vote, and permanent exhibits including California\u27s Hall of Fame provided individual biographical introductions to around 120 women in the state\u27s history. A moment at the Constitutional Wall also reminded all of the importance of California\u27s beginnings and its continued promise to native born and immigrants alike. Historians, students, environmental activists, and community organizers came together in Grace Covell Hall on Saturday, March 24, to hear presentations. Edie Sparks and coauthor Jessica Weiss of California State, East Bay, opened the symposium with Placing Women in California History, emphasizing how women have remained in the background in most texts on the state\u27s history, despite their achievements as shapers of social, economic, political and legal themes unique to California. Alice Van Ommeren, a local Stockton historian, provided case studies of leaders among women during Stockton\u27s Golden Age, 1890-1940. Her case studies ranged from Lottie Gunsky, a career teacher (1853-1922), to Lilla Miller Lomax (1859-1941), Stockton\u27s first female medical doctor, to Laura DeForce Gordon (1838- 1907), suffragette and attorney who was the first woman in the U.S. to own a newspaper, to EdnaGleason (1914- 1961), the first woman to serve on the Stockton City Council and President of the California Pharmaceutical Association. Dawn Bohulano Mabalon of San Francisco State University connected her own family\u27s history with Stockton\u27s large Filipino community, noting that within the city, Little Manila once housed the largest community of Filipinos outside of Manila itself. After an Asian- theme luncheon, Professor Emerita of American Studies, Judy Yung (U.C. Santa Cruz) provided the key note on the theme of Chinese women in the state\u27s history giving examples from the era of the Gold Rush to the twentieth century of Chinese women who broke the stereotype of those who came to Gold Mountain. These include Au Toy, one of San Francisco\u27s most successful business women who owned houses of prostitution and gambling, Ana May Wong, the most famous Chinese- American actress in the state\u27s history; Jay Snow Wong, the celebrated Bay-area ce- ramicist; March Fong Eu, first Asian- American Secretary of State; and Betty Suan Chen, who received the Presidential Citizen Medal in 2010 for her social work among the homeless. Student papers by Pacific\u27s own Christiana Oatman and Devon Clayton focused on women and campus life and organizations. Clayton traced the history of women\u27s literary societies going back to the San Jose campus (1871-1924) and con nected these with modern sororities on the Stockton campus. Michelle Khoury from Santa Clara University informed all of the struggle of Native American women after the Gold Rush as they faced discrimination, stereotyping, and graphic ridicule for traditional lifestyles and attempts to survive in the hostile environment of Anglo-California. Women and Environmental Justice was the theme of the final panel, which included an overview by Professor Nancy C. Unger of Santa Clara University on women as Nature\u27s Housekeepers, and case studies by Tracy Perkins, U.C. Santa Cruz and Teresa DeAnda, Director of the Committee for Well Being of Earlimart on citizen action in policy and pesticide reform (respectively). Jennifer Helgren closed the symposium with remarks on what we have learned, tying the exhibits in Sacramento at the California Museum with the papers and presentations given on campus. Page 3 Archivist\u27s Corner Cruising in Muir\u27s Footsteps By Michael Wurtz Holt-Atherton Special Collections University of the Pacific Library Years ago as a history graduate student at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff, I worked closely with the geography and geology departments. One of the geology grad students was involved with a project to re- photograph the Grand Canyon 100 years after Robert Brewster Stanton had surveyed and photographed a possible route for a railroad along the banks of the Colorado River in 1890 (Grand Canyon, A Century of Change: Rephotography of the 1889-1890 Stanton Expedition by Robert H. Webb 1996). The notes and markers that Stanton left made it possible to set up cameras in 1990 for precise re- photography. The grad student had told me that in one case they found Stanton\u27s footprints encased in petrified mud and knew exactly where he stood when he made the photo! This sense of place in history has been captivating to me ever since. In 2010, I traveled to Alaska for the first time, and I wanted to find John Muir\u27s footprints. Muir\u27s trips focused on Southeast Alaska, and I was going mostly into the interior. Fortunately, Muir and I did cross paths - albeit 111 years apart - in Prince William Sound and Cook Inlet. Muir was with the Harriman expedition in 1899, and I was on the Wurtz-Cosper trip of 2010. Dan Cosper\u27s father was stationed at Whittier in the 1950s, and there are many glacier cruises that embark from there. I gathered information on the cruise routes and compared them to Muir\u27s drawings and journals and notebooks. I harvested scans of the journals from the John Muir Papers website (go.pacific.edu/specialcollections), transcribed the text I could read, printed them out, and stuck them in Ziploc bags. Our initial trip to the Port Wells glaciers was to include a half-dozen more glaciers on the College Fjord, but our mighty boat the Klondike Express broke down, leaving us narrating stories and songs of that fateful cruise. The next day brought clearer skies and another glacier cruise to complete the mission. I could never triangulate most of the drawings as precisely as I was hoping, but the following were the best rephotography and they helped me to see Alaska as Muir saw it. — Muir\u27s notes indicate that he had drawn this opp[osite] Homer P.O. [Post Office] . The Post Office had moved many times, and the local museum could not clarify its location in 1899.1 went to an overlook behind town and snapped this photo from the about the same angle, but not the same aspect. (continued on page 8) Page 4 vihlcn ooaaAal cani^imJCe^, lo CtrWiiuurv =)Luvcotrva- t\u3eXoJt\inxu27u. in^AalaJoXe-, XJnuA aa/iincu -true Mkuj- Lew Vtvu. JLatumal Jo^tc tiAitiX&m, (continued from page 1) single photograph in my life. 2 Photographers such as, Carleton Watkins, George Fiske, Edward Curtis, Theodore Lukens, and C. H. Mer- riam stand out within the collection because of their thorough survey of western landscapes or their contribution to conserving or restoring them. Carleton Watkins is known as one of the great photographers of the West. In the summer of 1861, Watkins took his mammoth plate camera (18 x 22 glass plate negatives) to Yosemite to create highly detailed images of the Valley. According to the Getty Museum, he created a comprehensive photographic survey, which partly contributed to Abraham Lincoln\u27s signing of the 1864 bill that declared the valley inviolable, thus paving the way for the National Park system. 3 Watkins\u27 stereo cards of southern California landscapes depicting agricultural practices are also commonly found in the John Muir Papers. Carlton Watkins captured landscapes of the West. Muir may have used this photograph of an irrigated orange grove in San Gabriel as a guide to tending his own orchards. (f 15-764 John Muir Papers Holt-Atherton Special Collections©1984 Muir Hanna Trust) The extent of Muir and Watkins relationship is relatively indefinable, but in a letter from William Keith to Muir in 1909, Keith tells of Watkins\u27 son selling photographs from his father\u27s collection because Watkins was approaching blindness and financial hardship had left the family in need. Keith suggests, I gave him 50.00 and I think you ought to do something. 4 George Fiske is prominent in John Muir\u27s photo collection too, and was a principal photographer of the Yosemite Valley. He began in San Francisco and soon was working with Watkins and Eadweard Muybridge in Yosemite. In 1879 Fiske moved to the Yosemite Valley and was the first full-time resident photographer.5 Fiske was able to photograph the valley during every season. Muir responded to a threat to Fiske\u27s residency in the valley in 1905, I don\u27t believe there is the slightest danger of your being turned out of Yosemite Valley. If only one photographer should be left in the Valley, I think every right-minded person in the country would agree that you were that one. 6 George Fiske took A Glimpse of El Capitan in the summer and winter of 1880. His photographs of the Yosemite are very comprehensive and document the valley well. (f47 2722, f47-2723 John Muir Papers Holt-Atherton Special Collections ©1984 Muir Hanna Trust) The self-taught photographer Theodore Lukens used photography for his extensive research of trees. As a member of the Sierra Club, he was page 5 a friend of John Muir\u27s and an active conservationist and forester. In a letter written to John Muir from Lukens in 1897 about a stand of especially large oak trees near Santa Barbara, he states, Don\u27t you think I had better go up and measure the trees accurately, photograph them, and collect acorns and sprays of the foliage to send to you and Mr. Sargent. 7 Muir and Theodore Lukens corresponded about what was probably this large Oak that Lukens found near Santa Barbara. The photograph was taken by Lukens and probably sent to Muir along with some acorns and branches. (f 18-940 John Muir Papers Holt-Atherton Special Collections ©1984 Muir Hanna Trust) C. Hart Merriam, another amateur photographer, focused on zoology, ornithology, and later ethnography. Muir wrote letters to Merriam requesting photographs of varying subject matter for his books, Can you let me have a few telling photos of Sierra birds and beasts? bears, squirrels, chipmunks, neotoma, quail, grouse, woodpeckers etc. etc. etc. for illustrations? 8 Merriam\u27s lack of skill is evident throughout. His portrait of a porcupine is not compositionally balanced and shows someone\u27s boots and legs in the upper left corner. Bronzing, usually due to poor quality paper and improper developing method, can be found among Merriam\u27s images. C. Hart Merriam must have taken this photograph of a porcupine in Tuolumne Meadows in 1901 strictly for documentation as it is not aesthetically pleasing. (f45-2559 John Muir Papers Holt-Atherton Special Collections ©1984 Muir Hanna Trust) As the appointed photographer of the 1899 Harriman Expedition, Edward Curtis expansively documented the trip to Alaska. While on the expedition, Curtis began to gain an interest in the native peoples of the region and devoted the rest of his career to studying and documenting Native American tribes. Edward Curtis captured this image of Inuit children in Alaska on the Harriman Expedition of 1899. (f9 426 John Muir Papers Holt-Atherton Special Collections ©1984 Muir Hanna Trust) Looking through the John Muir Papers photography collection, one will observe many patterns. Landscapes, trees, animals, glaciers, botanical images, and family are among the frequent subjects that emerge in the collection, while less common subjects such as native peoples, land exploitation, and farming practices intermittently appear. Although Muir\u27s photographic collection included images from all over the world, California and Alaska are the dominant subjects in the collection. The images of California including Kings Canyon, Sequoia, and Pasadena, make up almost half of the entire eFL imoaed. L^ti|Wnl Page 6 (m\u3e, a, natwuui&t, a^aiaakeX, uatani&X, and. i&wLeA,, J\(maa, u&ed. pMataoAaaJluv la ejxamAnz. liAlina. ininaA aL true lacaXionA ne, -OxAileo. collection. As may be expected, roughly 575 images, the vast majority of California views, are of Yosem- ite\u27s vistas, trees, waterfalls, and more. A surprising amount of images of native peoples, their dwellings, and hieroglyphics from places like Yosemite, Alaska, Arizona, Utah, Africa, South East Asia, and Japan also surface in the collection. As a naturalist, geologist, botanist, and writer, Muir used photography to examine all living things at the locations he visited. He sent himself photographic postcards with flowers, landscapes, and native peoples to add to his collection. Muir also received photographs from his friends - especially images of trees. Many people sent him specimens and photographs of trees to identify or learn about new species. Lukens again sent Muir a letter in 1897, On my way home I met Mr. C. Knapp..., and he has promised to send me [a] branch and photo of an oak tree at his place 32 feet in cir. And he thinks it is the largest in this country. He went on to note, I will go up and photo it and get branches and acorns and send you some photos. 9 gg. POST CARD is- Muirwould purchase postcards to document botanical specimens that he found on his travels. (f20-1084 Pillsbury Picture Co. John Muir Papers Holt- Atherton Special Collections ©1984 Muir Hanna Trust) In another letter Muir expressed his gratitude for a photograph of a sugar pine sent by George King. Muir was very interested in the pine and wanted to know more about it. Where did you find that magnificent sugar pine? The finest specimen I have ever seen in a photograph. How tall is it, and how large in diameter 4 feet from the ground? 10 In addition to using photography for research, Muir used photographs in his conservation efforts. The collection consists of many photographs of logging, mining, railroads, and Hetch Hetchy. Muir expresses his joy of receiving some photographs from King again, I have received with many thanks your magnificent Hetch Hetchy photographs, a very telling lot. He went on to express, We are having a hard fight for Hetch Hetchy but think we will win. Help all you can. 11 Muir seems to have also collected photographs that document the exploitation of the land and the abuse of natural resources. This one is titled, Culling timber in Oregon and was planned to be used in a book. (f34-1933 John Muir Papers Holt-Atherton Special Collections ©1984 Muir Hanna Trust) Despite John Muir\u27s focus on nature, he collected nearly 800 images of his family and friends throughout his life. During the 19th and 20th centuries photography became a popular device for sharing one\u27s life. Nicole Hudgins claims that, the photo album of the 1890\u27s was a sort of Victorian Facebook, in the sense that dozens or even hundreds of portraits were preserved, displayed, and circulated among social and family networks. 12 In Muir\u27s correspondence it was not uncommon that a PAGE 7 portrait was either mailed to or from him. Although known for being alone in nature, many photographs reveal his good disposition and love of people. In one of the most touching of images of the collection, one can see the joy and love that Muir feels when surrounded by his grandchildren. A large number of images that are included in the Muir Papers illustrate the importance of people in his life. :.\u3c -- ■w-O V t **i\u3e*i W . ^M [uy_2 John Muir plays with his grandchildren Richard, John, and Strenzel Hanna in Martinez shortly before his death in 1914. (f24-1352 John Muir Papers Holt-Atherton Special Collections ©1984 Muir Hanna Trust) After analyzing the entire photography collection of John Muir, it seems that he used photographs for many diverse purposes. It is obvious that he used these images for research and to get a well rounded understanding of the areas in which he was interested. He also utilized the photographs to provide evidence to support his conservationist efforts, and he included images in association with his writing to provide readers with a view into his experiences. The collection also shows that he acquired photographs from numerous people including some of the most famous photographers of the West. In a letter to C. H. Merriam in December of 1900 Muir almost sums up his thoughts of photography in general when he says, Many thanks for the two fine lots of photographs. How well most of them have come out. The trees especially. They will be very useful to me besides bringing forward our fine trip last summer. 13 ENDNOTES 1. Ron and Maureen Willis, Photography as a Tool in Genealogy. Retyped by Ted Swift (Mountain View, CA). 2. Letter from John Muir to C. Hart Merriam 1901 Dec 31. John Muir Papers, Holt-Atherton Special Collections ©1984 Muir Hanna Trust. 3. Carleton Watkins. Getty Museum. http://www.getty.edu/art/gettyguide/ artMakerDetails?maker= 1989&page= 1 Accessed April 02, 2012. 4. Letter from William Keith to John Muir circa 1909. John Muir Papers, Holt- Atherton Special Collections ©1984 Muir Hanna Trust. 5. Views of Yosemite: George Fiske, 1880-1890. Bancroft Library. Online Archive California Library, http:// www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/ tf238nb395/. 6. Letter from John Muir to George Fiske, 1905 Mar 13. John Muir Papers, Holt- Atherton Special Collections ©1984 Muir Hanna Trust. 7. Letter from Theodore Lukens to John Muir, 1897 Jun 29. John Muir Papers, Holt-Atherton Special Collections ©1984 Muir Hanna Trust. 8. Letter from John Muir to C. Hart Merriam 1901 Mar 28. John Muir Papers, Holt-Atherton Special Collections ©1984 Muir Hanna Trust. 9. Letter from Theodore P. Lukens to John Muir 1897 Jun 30. John Muir Papers, Holt-Atherton Special Collections ©1984 Muir Hanna Trust. 10. Letter from John Muir to George King Nov 1913. John Muir Papers, Holt- Atherton Special Collections ©1984 Muir Hanna Trust. 11. Letter from John Muir to George King Nov 1913. John Muir Papers, Holt- Atherton Special Collections ©1984 Muir Hanna Trust. 12. Nicole Hudgins, A Historical Approach to Family Photography: Class and Individuality in Manchester and Lille, 1850 - 1914, (Journal of Social History, 2010), 565. 13. Letter from John Muir to C. Hart Merriam 1900 Dec 26. John Muir Papers, Holt-Atherton Special Collections ©1984 Muir Hanna Trust. Page 8 (continued from page 3) Surprise Glacier was an easy one to spot with its distinctive medial moraine. Our tourist boat did not get as close in as Muir, so I was unable to get the exact angle or aspect. The drawings do not capture the detail that a photograph can, but the Catarack Gl[acier] on the left seems to have receded quite a bit. This was on the Harriman Fjord of Port Wells of Prince William Sound. The focus of this drawing and photograph is actually a tributary of the Serpentine Glacier. The Serpentine Glacier itself is the debris-covered glacier that we can only see entering the Fjord in the foreground from the right. It appears that the tributary has receded quite a bit. All drawing pages are from June-July 1899, Harriman Expedition to Alaska, Part II, Reel 29 Journal 3, John Muir Papers, Holt- Atherton Special Collections, University of the Pacific Library. © 1984 Muir-Hanna Trust. Cascade Glacier was one the steepest we saw on our cruise. We did not get close enough to see it quite like Muir on the Harriman expedition in 1899. On many occasions, Muir had the opportunity to get off the boat and hike around. Barry Glacier is on the right. Book Review Page 9 The Making of Yosemite: James Mason Hutchings and the Origin of America\u27s Most Popular National Park. By Jen A. Huntley. (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2011. xi +232 pp. Illustrations, maps, notes, bibliography, index. 34.95.) Occasionally a book alters our general understanding of an individual and that person\u27s place in history. This study is one of those, shedding new light on James Mason Hutchings (1820-1902). Born in Towcester, Northamptonshire, England, Hutchings grew up in the geographic center of England, the sixth child of William, a carpenter, and Barbara, a paper lace maker. Lured to America by George Catlin\u27s touring exhibit of American Indian portraits, Hutchings immigrated to California in 1848 and located himself in Placerville during the height of the Gold Rush. In 1855, after seven years of part-time mining, part-time real estate speculation, and occasional newspaper editing, Hutchings visited Yosemite, a tipping point in his life. Seeing opportunity in promoting California, Hutchings moved to the valley, established himself as an entrepreneur in Yosemite, providing services for tourists and building a hotel, sawmill, and other facilities, some of the earliest infrastructure within the future national park. From 1855 to his death in 1902, Hutchings\u27 life and the Anglo expropriation and promotion of Yosemite were inextricably linked. This is the second recent biography of Hutchings, and goes well beyond Dennis Kruska\u27s James Mason Hutchings of Yo Semite: A Biography and Bibliography (San Francisco: Book Club of California, 2009), which emphasizes his contributions in print, notably letter sheets, almanacs, and Hutchings\u27 California Magazine (1856-1861). Through careful and thorough research, Hundley introduces a man we have not known, a misunderstood businessman, husband, father, and patron of the arts and sciences, who has received mixed treatment by previous scholars more interested in t

    Letter from John Moir to John Muir, 1891 Feb 17.

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    [in margin: Miscellaneous [Mr?] Bidwell etc]407 — 7th Ave South MinneapolisMinn17th Feb 1891Mr John MuirSir I have read with great interest your letters to the “Century” As I am informed you are a Scotchman long resident in California I would like to ask if you are a relative of mine My Father Henry Moir or Muir a native of Aberfoyle Perthshire (married Christiana Stewart) went to Ireland and became a Farmer there His younger brother John Moir or Muir went to California soon after the discovery of gold and followed gold mining forhttps://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmcl/38746/thumbnail.jp

    The John Muir Newsletter, Spring 2013

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    Page 1 transcription missing PAGE 2 F o Andrea Wulf unding Garden Speaks e r s AT o N P A C I F I C On February 27, prize-winning author Andrea Wulf spoke on the subject of Founding Gardeners: How the Revolutionary Generation Created an American Eden. The talk was sponsored by Phi Beta Kappa, the University Library, and John Muir Center and attracted more than eighty faculty, staff, students, and community members, many of the latter members of Master Gardeners. Born in India of German parents on assignment to the equivalent of our own Peace Corps, Wulf grew up in Germany and earned her first degree in Cultural Studies and Philosophy at the University of Luneburg in 1996. Since then, she has made Britain her home, earning a second advanced degree in the History of Design at the Royal College of Art and the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. In 2005, she published This Other Eden, Seven Great Gardens and Three Hundred Years of English History, co- authored with Emma Biegen-Gamal, released by Little Brown and adapted into a six-part mini-series on BBC radio. In 2008, Brothers Gardeners: Botany, Empire and the Birth of an Obsession was released by William Heinemann in the UK and by Alfred Knopf here in the United States in 2009. It won the American Horticultural Society 2010 Book Award and was long-listed for the Samuel Johnson Price, the most prestigious non-fiction award in theU. K. In 2011 she published Founding Gardeners: How the Revolutionary Generation Created an American Eden, again through Heinemann in the U. K. and Knopf here in the U.S. It not only made the New York Times Best Seller List, but was described by a reviewer in the Times as an illuminating and engrossing new book by the Washington Post as lively and deeply researched history. Last year, Chasing Venus: The Race to Measure the Heavens appeared in seven languages. Described by the Boston Globe as a book both astrophysicists and poets can understand, Wulf retells the story of scientists and philosophers following the infrequent transit of Venus in modern times. She has received a number of prestigious fellowships in the past decade, including three years at the Robert H. Smith International Center for Jefferson Studies at Monticello; a White House History Fellowship through the Organization of American Historians and the White House Historical Association. Currently she is the Eccles British Library Writer-in- Residence and lives in London. Her most recent project and the reason she came to Pacific is her interest in John Muir. She is Andrea Wulf at Pacific on February 27,2013 currently working on The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt\u27s New World, to be published by Knopf in 2015. Von Humboldt\u27s influence on John Muir will be a chapter in this book. The talk on Founding Gardeners focused on the impact of John (1699-1777) and son William Bartram (1737-1823) as seed and plant collectors on better known political figures from the Revolutionary generation; notably Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, George Washington, and James Madison. Described by famed Swedish botanist Carolus Linnaeus as the greatest natural botanist in the world, John Bar- tram\u27s garden within the city of Philadelphia provided Europeans and Americans with seeds from North American species. Wulf argues that gardening was much more than just a hobby for the four political giants in her study. Planting American species, the design of landscapes, and attitudes about green space generally reflect an Americanized approach quite different from the formal gardens of England and the continent. Connecting the Revolution with ideas of the founding fathers on the ideal farm and garden, Wulf concludes that democracy and an appreciation of American forests and wilderness are part of the formula that evolved through the process and practice of planting colonial and early National gardens. Wulf will return in 2014 to present on Alexander von Humboldt\u27s influence on John Muir. Page 3 Archivist Sea R C H I N RIGHT Muir J T R A N S C Pro s Corner G FOR THE word: O U R N A L R I P T I O N J E C T By Michael Wurtz , Archivist Holt-Atherton Special Collections University of the Pacific Library Have you ever wanted to probe deep into the mind of John Muir? Read his own thoughts immediately after he conjured them? How about search his thoughts to see if he ever wrote about bears or avalanches? The staff of Holt- Atherton Special Collections, the home of The John Muir Papers, has started a project to transcribe the Muir journals so we can get in his mind. For years we have been able to read his thoughts in his books which have been edited and polished for public consumption. The Sierra Club transcribed those books into their website so researchers can read the books online or search for words in the text. Researchers can find this sort of search functionality in Google Books as well. In 2008, the staff of Holt-Atherton Special Collections had John Muir\u27s correspondence transcribed and scanned for the world to read. The letters are closer to Muir thoughts than the books. The transcriptions not only help with legibility issues of reading Muir\u27s ideas, but also make them searchable for keywords. A year earlier in 2007, the staff scanned Muir\u27s 78 known journals and put them online too. They were not transcribed, since they consisted primarily of faded pencil and cursive writing, and were occasionally written out in many directions on a single page. Only the most devoted Muir fans and researchers were ready to decipher his writing. Stephanie LeMenager, Associate Professor of English at UC Santa Barbara, recently took an interest in Muir\u27s journal documenting his trip Tunf»* Mj-ch l*H. QMwqiM Prnom*UOmM The glofr i( ^| la everywhere How could Moses uks the cetelast Shoh ii8 t^y Glory ~D1sm1 Swamp\u27 no suet, place in net Sweeps a» peopled with plants CE the purest beajty s glow in their darkest heei ;he across the Isthmus of Panama in 1868. She meticulously transcribed the 8 pages of Muir\u27s almost illegible writing (the transcription can be found in these pages two years ago). Then we took her transcription and added it to the online journal scans. Now researchers wondering about Muir\u27s mention of God in his journals can find, The glory of God is everywhere. How could Moses make the request, \u27show me the glory.\u27 Earlier, the director of the John Muir Center, Bill Swagerty, worked with students to transcribe for publication the World Tour journals. Although these were only 5 journals of 78, we took it as a beginning. Fortunately, between Muir\u27s early biographers, William Bade and Linnie Marsh Wolfe, many of Muir\u27s journals were transcribed- obviously not with a computer, but with a typewriter. Bade took some editorial liberties, and Wolfe would sometimes only transcribe bits and pieces of journals, but their intentions were good, and those journal transcriptions were much more legible and accessible for reading and eventual publication. The Bade and Wolf transcriptions have formed the core of a long-term transcription project that the staff of Holt-Atherton Special Collections has started. With the aid of student workers, we are entering the transcriptions into the online journals. Over the last couple of years, we have added legible and word- searchable text to almost 20 Muir journals. What can you do to help transcribe the rest of the journals? Visit go.pacific.edu/ specialcollections, navigate to Muir\u27s journals, choose a page - any page - of untranscribed journal, and take a crack at it. There is a comments link at the bottom of each page to which you can add your new found text. If you feel more comfortable with email, send us what you have along with the journal and page number, and we will add your transcription to our online journals. The value of this kind of project is the expanded access to Muir\u27s thoughts as he first experienced them, and to make them word searchable. Join us! ex stepping an ants [5«ol i.a n-rt cruet tn s-i ill if} over Che great \u3e i Little of its Burfarre t : - \u27 i qoinq in the forests ■ Side-by-side, the legible and word searchable text and a scan of a page from Muir\u27s 1868 journal describing his trip across the Isthmus of Panama. John Muir Papers, Holt-Atherton Special Collections, University of the Pacific Library. © 1984 Muir-Hanna Trust. Page 4 transcription missing page 5 younger years.18 As Muir grew older, however, his dream now became a resolve: a long botanical ramble through...to South America. 19 Journals of his travels to Chile and Zimbabwe are emotionally engaged in a way that makes clear how rewarding he found these travels. 20 After his last journey through those mysterious and exciting countries, Muir himself considered it among the most important [trips] of his life and the fulfillment of a dream of decades. 21 It was not until the last years of his life that Muir could make his dreams come true and travel to his long sought-after destinations. In Chile, Muir\u27s main goal was to find the rare monkey puzzle tree. In Santiago, he went to the botanical gardens to search for information concerning Araucaria imbricata.22 In the middle of November, Muir was taken to the forests [he had] so long wished to see by a kind American sawmill owner.23 Once he was among the forests of the A. imbricata that he had so long dreamed of, it seemed familiar. 24 . th Muir had dreamed of the monkey puzzle tree for so long that once he saw this forest of them in Chile, they seemed familiar. November 1911-March 1912, Trip to South America, Part III, and Trip to Africa, John Muir Papers, Holt-Atherton Special Collections, University of the Pacific Library. © 1984 Muir-Hanna Trust. There were various reasons Muir wanted to travel to Africa some of which were to tour one of the only parts of the world he had not yet visited; to observe native African flora; to see the wildlife of the central African plains; and, to reach the headwaters of the Nile. 25 Although there were many reasons to visit the huge continent, Muir\u27s main mission was to find the enormous Adansonia digitata, better known as the African baobab, which he longed to see.26 Zimbabwe gave Muir the opportunity to see this magnificent tree in person. The day he found the tree was a wonderful day, wonderful in many ways; one of the greatest of the great tree days of my lucky life. 27 For Muir, the chance to see such rare and glorious trees was reason enough to travel across the world. Another tree that Muir had longed to see was the Baobab. One of the greatest of the great tree days of my lucky life. November 1911- March 1912, Trip to South America, Part III, and Trip to Africa. John Muir Papers, Holt-Atherton Special Collections, University of the Pacific Library. ©1984 Muir-Hanna Trust. Muir wanted to observe the creations and landscapes made by God and he traveled and grew stronger and richer in the knowledge of God\u27s earth in each journey he made.28 His main goal in life was to see, learn, and appreciate all of Nature\u27s creations until his dying day. Since God allowed him to regain his vision after the accident in 1867, he spent the rest of his time seeing the truth and beauty inherent in the world. 29 Although his travels had scientific, political, and literary purposes, his journeys were all spent seeking the pleasures one finds in the cathedrals of God. Ariadna Hernandez was born in Guanajuato, Mexico as the eldest of three daughters. At the age of three her family migrated to the United States. Her father was a field worker and was greatly interested in nature. He transferred his passion of all living creatures to her as a young girl, as well as a love for reading. She graduated from Lincoln High School in Stockton, CA and is now a 3rd year Environmental Science major here at the University of the Pacific. Page 6 ENDNOTES 1. Donald Worster, A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir (NY: Oxford University Press, 2008) p. 377. A map of Muir\u27s global travels is found in Gretel Ehrlich, John Muir: Nation\u27s Visionary (Washington, DC: National Geographic Society, 2000), pp. 18-19. 2. Michael Branch, John Muir\u27s Last Journey (Washington DC: Island Press, 2001) p. xxviii. 3. ibid., p. xxix. 4. Letter from John Muir to Jeanne Carr, 1867 May 2. John Muir Papers, Holt-Atherton Special Collections © 1984 Muir Hanna Trust. 5. John Muir, Travels in Alaska (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1915; 1998 edition) p. 3. 6. Worster, Passion for Nature, p. 247. 7. Muir, Travels in Alaska, p. 110. 8. ibid., p. 246. 9. Worster, Passion for Nature, p. 377. 10. John Muir, World Tour, unpublished journals transcribed by Linnie Marsh Wolfe, edited by W. R. Swagerty, John Muir Papers, Holt- Atherton Special Collections © 1984 Muir Hanna Trust, Published in the John Muir Newsletter, 6 parts, 2005-2008. See Part I. 11. World Tour, Part I. 12. ibid. 13. Worster, Passion for Nature, p. 380. 14. Muir, World Tour, Part V. 15. Worster, Passion for Nature, p. 383. 16. Muir, World Tour, Part V. 17. Muir references these two explorers in Story of My Boyhood and Youth (Boston: Houghton-Mifflin, c. 1912, 1916 ed.), p. 207. Park (1771-1806) was a Scottish surgeon who in 1795 was supported by the Association for Promoting the Discovery of the Interior of Africa to discover the course of the River Niger. His book, Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa was published in 1799 and was widely read. On Humboldt\u27s influence on Muir and others, see Aaron Sachs, The Humboldt Current: Nineteenth Century Exploration and the Roots of American Environmentalism (New York: Viking Penguin, 2006), especially chapters 8-9. Also see Michael Branch, John Muir\u27s Travels to South America and Africa, in John Muir: Family, Friends, and Adventures, ed. Sally M. Miller and Daryl Morrison (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2005), pp. 249-65. 18. This story is repeated by Muir and his editor, William Frederic Bade in Story of My Boyhood and Youth, pp. 360ff; and in Thousand Mile Walk to the Gulf (Boston: Houghton-Mifflin, 1916), pp. 143-68. 19. Branch, John Muir\u27s Last Journey, p. xxix. ibid., p. 102. ibid., p. xxiii. p. 110. p. 114. p. 115. p. 129. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. ibid., ibid., ibid., ibid., ibid. ibid., p. 147. Muir, World Tour, Part III. Worster, Passion for Nature, p. 112. SAVE THE DATE John Muir Symposium, March 21-22, 2014 Join us on the 150\u27\u27 anniversary or the Yosemite Grant, tne 100* anniversary or Muir\u27s death, ana the 50\u27\u27 anniversary or the passage or the Wilderness Act to revisit John Muir\u27s lire and legacy. University oi the Paciiic -will host the 60** Caliiornia History Institute on the Stockton campus irom Friday, March 21, through Saturday, March 22. Expect to hear papers by new Muir scholars currently working Muir\u27s legacy, as well as several ramiliar names \u27who have become regulars at Muir symposia. Plenary sessions and keynotes will be given by three scholars now living in the U. K.: Terry Girrord, Graham White and Andrea Wulr. A special exhibit on the history or the Muir Papers and their present locations is planned, as well as coordinated rield trips berore and alter the symposium. Ir interested in presenting or attending the conrerence, please contact : wswagertv (Sparine. edu Page 7 Wild and Scenic Environmental Film Fest at Pacific Hosted by Sustaining Pacific & John Muir Center Thursday, April 11th, 2013 6-8:30PM rsily ol ihe Pacific, 3601 Pacific Avenue, Wendell Phillips Cenltr \u3et _ 6:00-6:30 PM Reception ■ 6:30-7:30 PM Films - Intermission 7:45-8:30PM Films Free and Open to the Public SfemCkib • Group patattoni Cevth Omy FutVeJ Baggi Tract Community nvm Dr. Shanna Eller, Director of Sustainability at Pacific and Lucy Kramer, an Environmental Studies major at Pacific, together with W. Swa- gerty of Muir Center, recently applied for a grant to host an environmental film festival through the South Yuba Citizens\u27 League (SYRCL) of Ne vada City, CA. Supported by Patagonia, CLIF Bar, Mother Jones, and Sierra Nevada Brewing, partners with Pacific include Friends of the Lower Calaveras, The Delta-Sierra Group within the Sierra Club, Stockton Earth Day Festival, and the Boggs Tract Community Farm. Exhibits will be mounted by partners in WPC\u27s courtyard and films selected by students from an available list of over sixty documentaries will be shown in WPC 140 on campus on Thursday, April 11 from 6 PM to 8:30 PM. The films are all short and range from following The Man Who Lived on His Bike across an entire year to a biography of Georgena Terry, founder of Terry Bicycles, who revolutionized that industry by creating a frame specific to a woman\u27s body; to an Afghan-produced film, Skateistan, highlighting co-educational opportunities for learning to skateboard in that part of the world; to Timber, a film by Adam Fisher on responsible versus irresponsible use of natural resources; to The Way Home, a journey in Yosemite National Park with the Amazing Grace 50+ Club of Los Angeles; to Chasing Water, a film based on photographer Pete McBride\u27s attempt to follow irrigation water from his family\u27s Colorado ranch down to the sea along the Colorado River. The event is free and open to the public with refreshments provided. ENVIRONMENTAL FILM FESTIVAL 9 SIGN UP FOR THE ELECTRONIC VERSION BY CONTACTING: THE JOHN MUIR CENTER University of the Pacific 3601 Pacific Avenue Stockton, California 95211 ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED ~T~ ~r ~r -j. . i V rv \u3eV- v\u3e The John Mu Center The John Muir Center promotes the study of John Muir and environmental- ism at the University of the Pacific and beyond. Center Objectives As one of California\u27s most important historical figures, John Muir (1838- 1914) was a regional naturalist with global impact. His papers, housed in the library\u27s Holt-Atherton Special Collections, are among the University\u27s most important resources for scholarly research. Recognizing the need both to encourage greater utilization of the John Muir Papers by the scholarly community, and the need to promote the study of California and its impact upon the global community, the John Muir Center was established in 1989 with the following objectives: • To foster a closer academic relationship between Pacific and the larger community of scholars, students and citizens interested in regional and environmental studies. • To provide greater opportunities for research and publication by Pacific faculty and students. • To offer opportunities for out-of- classroom learning experiences. • To promote multi-disciplinary curricular development. Phone: 209.946.2527 Fax: 209.946.2318 E-mail: [email protected]://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/jmn/1094/thumbnail.jp
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