Description
This collection consists of digital images of the
correspondence of John Muir from 1856-1914. The vast majority of the letters were
sent and received by Muir, although the collection also includes some correspondence
of selected family members and colleagues. Muir’s correspondence offers a unique
first-hand perspective on his thoughts and experiences, as well as those of his
correspondents, which include many notable figures in scientific, literary, and
political circles of the 19th and early 20th centuries. The correspondence forms
part of the John Muir Papers microfilm set that filmed letters located at over 35
institutions.
Background
A Scottish-born journalist and naturalist, John Muir (1838-1914) studied botany and
geology at the University of Wisconsin (1861-1863). He worked for awhile as a mill
hand at the Trout Broom Factory in Meaford, Canada (1864-1866), then at an
Indianapolis carriage factory (1866-1867), until an accident temporarily blinded him
and directed his thoughts toward full-time nature study. Striking out on foot for
South America, Muir walked to the Gulf of Mexico (September 1867-January 1868), but
a long illness in Florida led him to change his plans and turn his interests
westward. Muir arrived by ship at San Francisco (March 1868), walked to the Sierra
Nevada Mountains and began a five year wilderness sojourn (1868-1873) during which
he made his year-round home in the Yosemite Valley. Working as a sheepherder and
lumberman when he needed money for supplies, Muir investigated the length and
breadth of the Sierra range, focusing most of his attention on glaciation and its
impact on mountain topography. He began to publish newspaper articles about what he
saw in the California mountains and these articles brought him to the attention of
such intellectuals as Asa Gray and Ralph Waldo Emerson, both of whom sought him out
during their visits to California. Encouraged by Jeanne Carr, wife of his one-time
botany professor, Ezra S. Carr, Muir took up nature writing as a profession (1872).
He set up winter headquarters in Oakland and began a pattern of spring and summer
mountaineering followed by winter writing based upon his travel journals that he
held to until 1880. His treks took him to Mount Shasta (1874, 1875 & 1877),
the Great Basin (1876, 1877, 1878), southern California and the Coast Range (1877),
and southern Alaska (1879). Muir found that he could finance his modest bachelor
lifestyle with revenue from contributions published in various San Francisco
newspapers and magazines. During this period he launched the first lobbying effort
to protect Sierra forests from wasteful lumbering practices (1876).
Restrictions
Some of the materials in the John Muir Correspondence Collection may be protected
by the U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.) and/or by the copyright or
neighboring rights laws of other nations. Additionally, the reproduction of some
materials may be restricted by privacy or publicity rights. Responsibility for
making an independent legal assessment of an item and securing any necessary
permissions ultimately rests with persons desiring to reproduce or use the item.