John Muir
Naturalist / Writer
John Muir was an early American conservationist who has been called "The Father of the National Parks System." Muir came to the United States in 1849 and studied at the University of Wisconsin (1859-1863). He walked from Indiana to the Gulf of Mexico in 1867 and 1868, ended up in California and began his love affair with the Yosemite Valley. An eager traveller and indefatigable walker, he also toured Nevada, Utah and Alaska. He settled in California where he wrote, managed a fruit ranch, and campaigned for the establishment of Yosemite National Park, which Congress approved in 1890. His descriptions of the rugged glories of the American west influenced the thinking of President Theodore Roosevelt, among many others. Muir was a co-founder of the Sierra Club and served as its first president from 1892 until his death in 1914. His books include The Mountains of California (1894) and Our National Parks (1901).Extra credit: Muir (along with an image of Yosemite) is featured on the California state quarter released by the U.S. Mint in 2005... As a young man Muir was a talented wood carver and inventor who built his own clocks.
Blog posts mentioning John Muir:
John Muir and 'Stickeen'
States to Heroes: Drop Dead
Four Good Links
John Muir Exhibit
The Sierra Club provides a mountain of Muir information
John Muir Trust
Includes some background on Muir and a page of related links
John Muir Writings
Archive of several of his writings
The U.S. Mint: California
The story of Muir's appearance on the California quarter-dollar
Vital Stats
Birth
Birthplace
Death
24 December 1914
(pneumonia, age 76)
Best Known As
Naturalist and founder of the Sierra Club

