John Muir

’s Trail In History Essay, Research Paper


John Muir’s Trail in History


John Muir was a man of great importance in the history of the United


States and in the preservation of it’s beauty. His tireless efforts to protect


natural wonders such as Yosemite Valley demonstrated his undying love for the


outdoors. Muir took a stand against the destructive side of civilization in a


dauntless battle to save America’s forest lands. The trail of preservation that


Muir left behind has given countless numbers of people the opportunity to


experience nature’s magnificence.


John Muir was born on April 21, 1838 in the small rural town of Dunbar,


Scotland. As a boy, Muir was ?fond of everything that was wild?(My Boyhood and


Youth 30) and took great pleasure in the outdoors. In 1849, Muir and his family


emigrated to Wisconsin to homestead. The great forests of Northern United


States captivated him and fueled his desire to learn more. Muir later enrolled


in courses in chemistry, geology, and botany at the University of Wisconsin.


After his education, Muir began working in a factory inventing small machines


and contraptions. However, a serious working accident in the factory left Muir


temporarily blind. When he finally regained his vision, he vowed to live life


to the fullest and devote everything he had to nature.


At the age of 29, Muir made a thousand-mile walk from Indianapolis to


Florida for the sheer pleasure of being outdoors. This experience enlightened


Muir and compelled him to extend his travels. With his family’s blessings (his


wife and two daughters), he began to wander America’s forests, mountains,


valleys, and meadows extensively. Alone and on foot, he filled his notebooks


with sketches and descriptions of the plants, animals, and trees that he loved.


He later took trips around the world, including destinations such as Europe and


South America. There he explored the Amazon basin and noted many new plant


species. In Alaska, he became the first white man to see Glacier Bay. He


definitely made an impact in Alaska’s history: Mount Muir, Muir Glacier, Muir


Point, and Muir Inlet all carry his name.


However, it was California’s Sierra Nevada and Yosemite Valley that


truly claimed him. In 1868, he walked across the San Joaquin Valley through


waist-high wildflowers and into the high country for the first time. Later he


would write: “Then it seemed to me the Sierra should be called not the Nevada,


or Snowy Range, but the Range of Light…the most divinely beautiful of all the


mountain chains I have ever seen”(Wolfe, 230).


By 1871, Muir had found living glaciers in the Sierra and had conceived


his controversial theory of the glaciation of Yosemite Valley. Muir’s


reputation for exploration, glaciation, and environmental studies began to be


well known throughout the country. Famous men of the time ? Joseph LeConte, Asa


Gray and Ralph Waldo Emerson ? made their way to the door of his pine cabin.


In later years he turned seriously to writing; publishing 300 articles


and 10 major books composed of his travel journals. They recounted his travels,


expounded his naturalist philosophy, and beckoned everyone to “climb the


mountains and get their good tidings”(Muir, Life and Letters, 34). Muir’s love


of the high country gave his writings a spiritual quality. His readers, whether


they be presidents, congressmen, or plain folks, were inspired and often moved


to action by the enthusiasm of Muir’s own unbounded love of nature.


Through a series of articles appearing in Century magazine, Muir drew


attention to the devastation of mountain meadows and forests by sheep and cattle.


With the help of Century’s associate editor, Robert Underwood Johnson, Muir


worked to remedy this destruction. In 1890, due in large part to the efforts of


Muir and Johnson, an act of Congress created Yosemite National Park. Muir was


also personally involved in the creation of Sequoia, Mount Rainier, Petrified


Forest and Grand Canyon National Parks. Muir deservedly is often called the


“Father of Our National Park System.”


Johnson and others suggested to Muir that an association be formed to


protect the newly created Yosemite National Park from the assaults of stockmen


and others who would diminish its boundaries. In 1892, Muir and a number of his


supporters founded the Sierra Club to, in Muir’s words, “do something for


wildness and make the mountains glad”(Muir, Summer, 47). It was established


specifically to rally citizens who believed in the preservation of the High


Sierra and who understood the need for eternal vigilance in its protection.


Muir served as the Club’s first president.


In 1901, Muir published Our National Parks. The book brought him


national attention, influencing President Theodore Roosevelt. In May of 1903,

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Roosevelt and Muir traveled to Yosemite. Roosevelt was awestruck by the


captivating scenery and beauty of the valley. For the duration of the three-day


camping excursion, Muir preached the importance of preventing ?the destructive


work of the lumbermen and other spoilers of the for-est?(Wadsworth, 112). There,


together, beneath the trees, they laid the foundation of Roosevelt’s innovative


and notable conservation programs.


However, the trail of John Muir was not always a smooth one. He fought


syndicates, congress, and lobbyists. ?The battle we have fought, and are still


fighting… is a part of the eternal conflict between right and wrong, and we


cannot expect to see the end of it?(Browning 53).


The growing city of San Francisco was in need of a constantly expanding


water supply. Hetch Hetchy Valley, north of Yosemite Valley in Yosemite


National Park, was a prime location for a dam that would create a lake where the


Tuolumne River was. Because it was completely within the National Park, there


would be no private property to buy the land from. Muir was strongly opposed


of the proposition right from the beginning. He argued that ?This valley… is


one of the sublime and beautiful and important features of the Park, and to dam


and submerge it would be contradictive [to what] they were intended for when the


Park was established?(Silverberg, 233).


To Muir’s dismay, he found the Sierra Club was divided: a strong


minority of members, living in San Francisco, were ready to sacrifice Hetch


Hetchy to the city’s needs. Muir and his Sierra Club associate William Colby


then set up a new organization, the Society for the Preservation of National


Parks. At first the new organization was a success and it seemed that Hetch


Hetchy would be safe. However, when Woodrow Wilson took office in 1913, the new


Secretary of the Interior, a San Franciscan lobbyist of Hetch Hetchy, pushed a


bill through congress that allowed the construction of the dam. Muir set forth


a flood of appeals, letters, articles, and statements, but to no avail. Hetch


Hetchy was lost. Muir later said: ?Dam Hetch Hetchy! As well dam for water-


tanks the people’s cathedral’s and churches, for no holier temple has ever been


consecrated by the heart of man?(Browning, 65-6).


During this unpleasant affair, Muir’s health had been failing


dramatically and the defeat was a devastating blow to his already weakened


condition. On December 24, 1914, Muir died at the age of 76 in Los Angeles.


In acknowledgment of his achievements, California has greatly recognized Muir as


an important man to honor in the state’s history. The Muir Woods National


Monument in Marin County, Calif., and The John Muir Trail extending from


Yosemite Valley to the summit of Mt. Whitney were established. Mount Muir, Muir


Gorge, Muir Grove, Muir Lake, Muir Mountain, Muir Pass, and Muir’s Peak were


also named after him. 1976 the California Historical Society voted John Muir


the greatest Californian in the state’s history. California’s governor


proclaimed every April 21 John Muir Day in honor of his birthday.


John Muir was perhaps this country’s most famous and influential


naturalist and conservationist. He taught the people of his time and ours the


importance of experiencing and protecting our natural heritage. His words have


heightened our perception of nature. His personal and determined involvement in


the great conservation questions of his time was and remains an inspiration and


stepping stone for today’s environmental activists.


Richard Hawley, an active environmentalist and executive director and


co-founder of Greenspace, a local environmentalist group in Cambria, commented


on the achievements of Muir. ?John Muir was a dedicated man that had a vision…


and a passion for natural beauty. He is a guiding light for a lot of people.


The legacy of John Muir lives on through The John Muir Trail and Yosemite


National Park.? Hawley went on further to say that ?conservation is critical…


and Muir set [the environmental movement] in motion.?


Many people today follow the path of John Muir’s conservation. His


teachings of nature and life live on through his writings. He possessed the


foresight to know that the forests needed to be protected. He knew that they


wouldn’t have lasted forever. The Sierra Club that he founded has helped save


millions of acres of forest lands, and other national monuments that otherwise


would have been destroyed. He truly took a stand for nature, and in doing so,


took a stand for mankind.


“The whole wilderness seems to be alive and familiar, full of humanity.


The very stones seem talkative, sympathetic, brotherly. No wonder when we


consider that we all have the same Father and Mother.”


-John Muir, April 1911


(Browning 13).

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