A Tribute to John Muir


"How hard to realize that every camp of men or beast has its glorious starry firmament for a roof.

In such places, standing alone on the mountaintop, it is easy to realize that whatever special nests we make --
leaves and moss like the marmots and the birds, or tents or piled stone --

 we all dwell in a house of one room --

the world with the firmament for its roof --

are all sailing the celestial spaces without leaving any track."

~  John Muir


John Muir was born in Scotland in 1838 and came to the backwoods of Wisconsin when he was 11.  As a teenager, he had no time for school or formal study. He worked with his father taming nature, clearing the forest, plowing with a team of oxen and other arduous tasks. Yet he so desired knowledge that he would rise at one in the morning to read.

He wrote, “I had gained five hours, almost half a day! ‘Five hours to myself!’ ‘Five huge, solid hours!’ I can hardly think of any other event of my life, any discovery I ever made that gave birth to joy so transportingly glorious as the possession of these five frosty hours.” ( I can relate - I often write my blog posts in the early hours of morning).

He was a naturalist from the beginning. All creatures drew his sympathy and he paid close attention to the wonders of nature.  He attended the University of Wisconsin studying an eclectic course of study and left after two and a half years in 1863.

In 1867, while working, his hand slipped and a point of a file pierced one eye. He lost the use of that eye. The other went dark in sympathy. It was the bleakest time of his life.

As his sight gradually returned, over a period of months, he resolved to spend the rest of his life immersed in the sights that had been denied him in his darkened sickroom — the forests, fields, lakes and mountains of pure, unspoiled nature.

He took wilderness treks and ended up in Yosemite Valley in Calilfornia in the spring of 1868. He was 30 and Yosemite changed his world.

One of the sights in Yosemite Valley

He lived and worked in the Valley for several years and  became so knowledgeable about this magnificent natural wonder that he became a guide for some of the most famous of Yosemite’s visitors, including one of his idols, Ralph Waldo Emerson.

Site of John Muir's 'Sugar Pine cabin' where he lived in Yosemite

Emerson tried to entice Muir away from Yosemite, telling him the world was waiting to hear him teach but Muir chose to stay.

Eventually, he did leave the Valley and in 1880, he married and moved to Martinez, California, 35 miles from San Francisco.  He became fairly wealthy as a grower of Pears and grapes, but realized that, unless something were done, the glorious Yosemite wilderness he had found in 1868 (and wrote about so gloriously) would soon be only a memory.

In 1889 Muir took Robert Underwood Johnson, editor of Century, one of the most prominent magazines in the country, on a camping trip to Tuolumne Meadows in Yosemite.  Johnson then published Muir's two articles advocating that Yosemite be made into a National Park and lobbied Congress energetically. Congress complied with this emotional and literary appeal and created the Yosemite National Park.




He went on to found the Sierra Club in 1892, the purpose which was to preserve and make accessible the Sierra Nevada mountains of California. He zealously taught and promoted preservation of the natural environment wherever he went...a foreign concept back then.


 He railed against the “...devotees of ravaging commercialism, [who] seem to have a perfect contempt for Nature, and, instead of lifting their eyes to the God of the mountains, lift them to the Almighty Dollar."

He advised  instead to, “Climb the mountains and get their good tidings.” 

He died in 1914 but in the years hence, his fame has grown. In 1976, the Calfiornia Historical Society voted him “The Greatest Californian.”

The most poignant tribute ever given to Muir took place in a private conversation between two great contemporary mountaineers. Galen Rowell once asked Rheinhold Messner why the Alps in Switzerland were so highly developed, with hotels and funicular railways, while in America, the mountains are relatively free of development.
 
Messner explained the difference in three words. He said, “You had Muir.”
 


This was edited and adpated from a MUIR biography in a great blog, EcoTopia.
 
Here is a great book of his best writings....
 
 
 
 
 
 

Comments

  1. Muir powers me to push further and to want to do great things in my career as a Landscape Architect... "climb the mountains..." reach for the top.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Muir park is quite beautiful in California. Great info on this guy. Coming from Wisconsin, I would hear a lot about this guy....and then I lived in California for 2 years visiting Yosemite National Park and other parks that had his influence....I saw his name so much everywhere I actually read up on him. He and Roosevelt, the first one, have had a lasting influence that will be hopefully felt for future generations.

    ReplyDelete
  3. you are very welcome! Not many people know about Muir outside of California and that is a great shame.

    and like 'rohrerbot' says, T. Roosevelt and Muir were so influential - and we often forget what terrible things could have happened, if not for them.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I've been surfing online more than 4 hours today,
    yet I never found any interesting article like yours.
    It's pretty worth enough for me. In my view, if all web owners and bloggers made good
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    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank You! and I hope the terrible fire does not affect your business! Prayers to all those in that beautiful area...

      Delete

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