Title:
Letter from R[obert] U[nderwood] Johnson to Board of Directors of the Sierra Club, [ca. 1893].
Creator:
R[obert] U[nderwood] Johnson
Publisher:
University of the Pacific Library Holt-Atherton Special Collections. Please contact this institution directly to obtain copies
of the images or permission to publish or use them beyond educational purposes.
Contributor:
Board of Directors of the Sierra Club
Date:
[ca. 1893]
2008
Type:
Text
Format:
Image/jpeg2000
Identifier:
muir07_1481-md-1
Source:
Original letter dimensions: 33 x 20.5 cm.
Language:
eng
Coverage:
[New York]
Rights:
Copyright status unknown
Some letters written to John Muir may be protected by the U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.). Transmission or reproduction
of materials protected by copyright beyond that allowed by fair use requires the written permission of the copyright owners.
Responsibility for any use rests exclusively with the user.
Transcription:
Board of Director of tho Sierra Club, 809 Market street, San Francisco, Cal. Dear sirs: - Will you permit me very respectfully
to suggest whether the Sierra Club might not now profitably set on foot a campaign with the purpose of procuring the recession
of the old Yosemite Valley Reservation to the united states Government at the next session of the Legislature. The polioy
of establishing the great Yo somite National Park and the adjoining Sierra forest reservation has now been thoroughly cindi-cated
,and it is beyond contention that the government protection of such reserves,as in the case of the Yellowstone National Park,
is very much more effective then state control. It seems to me that in view of tho fact thrt tho administration of tho Yosemite
Valley has been a source o-f continual oriticism both in relation to the treatment of the natural features and in the relation
of the commissioners to the commercial interests connected with the valley, the Club has in the nature of its character and
purpose a certain responsibility toward public sentiment in this matter, I am of those who think that perhaps such a desirable
result as the merging of the old reservation into the newer ones, and its control by the general government, could be brought
about without a campaign of recrimination and personal criticism, though for that matter I do not know that in the public
inter-est one should shirk from such a contest if necessary. It is as true now as it was five years ago that thin reservation
has not been taken care of in a way commensurata with its importan and no expert has ever been consulted as to the management
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