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Natural Rivals

John Muir, Gifford Pinchot, and the Creation of America’s Public Lands

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Natural Rivals

By: John Clayton
Narrated by: Richard Powers
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This dynamic examination traces the lives of two of the most influential figures - and their dueling approaches - on America’s natural landscape.

John Muir, the most famous naturalist in American history, protected Yosemite, cofounded the Sierra Club, and is sometimes called the Father of the National Parks. A poor immigrant, self-taught, individualistic, and skeptical of institutions, he had an idealistic belief in the spiritual benefits of holistic natural systems that led him to a philosophy of preserving wilderness unimpaired.

Gifford Pinchot founded the US Forest Service and advised his friend Theodore Roosevelt on environmental policy. Raised in wealth, educated in privilege, and interested in how institutions and community can overcome failures in individual virtue, Pinchot’s pragmatic belief in professional management led him to a philosophy of sustainably conserving natural resources.

When these rivaling perspectives meet, what happens? For decades, the story of their relationship has been told as a split between the conservation and preservation philosophies, sparked by a proposal to dam a remote Yosemite valley called Hetch Hetchy. But a decade before that argument, Muir and Pinchot camped together alongside Montana’s jewel-like Lake McDonald in what was at the heart of a region not yet consecrated as Glacier National Park.

At stake in 1896 was the new idea that some landscapes should be collectively, permanently owned by a democratic government. Although many people today think of public lands as an American birthright, their very existence was then in doubt and dependent on a merger of the talents of these two men. Natural Rivals examines a time of environmental threat and political dysfunction not unlike our own and reveals the complex dynamic that gave birth to America’s rich public lands legacy.

©2019 John Clayton (P)2019 Blackstone Publishing
Environmentalists & Naturalists Nature & Ecology Conservation Environment Professionals & Academics Adventurers, Explorers & Survival Biographies & Memoirs World Science Outdoors & Nature Expeditions & Discoveries Land Conservation
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if the goal of the book is to compare two men who were leaders in preserving natural resources and show that their different methods were not so opposite then this book falls a bit short. However, the author does well presenting both men, their contributions and the general history of the struggle of how to both use and preserve natural resources.

good but not great

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The nature reserves and the invention of public land are laid out with great information, but proceeds to be dry with detailed description. The book reinvigorates love for nature.

history text book with extra visuals

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author tells an interesting story about the relationship of these two great men showing their rivalry actually was overblown and their goals of saving our natural wonders from destruction were closer than each was willing to admit. We need champions of nature like these two giants now more than ever.

entertaining story of a great rivalry

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Gifford Pinchot was my great grandfather’s brother and I appreciated this book! Gifford has been undervalued by historians a long time. Bravo!!

Review by a Pinchot

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I’d have given 5 stars for the story if the last chapter was just deleted.

Really enjoyed this book

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