Dreamers & Defenders: American Conservationists

Front Cover
U of Nebraska Press, 1988 M01 1 - 295 pages
In Dreamers and Defenders Douglas H. Strong relates the triumphs and defeats of twelve environmentalists from Henry David Thoreau to Barry Commoner. Their biographies form the dramatic and ongoing story of the conservationømovement in America.

Beginning with Thoreau, Frederick Law Olmsted, and George Perkins Marsh, Strong shows that conservation enjoyed the support of a few writers and scientists even in the heyday of land development in the mid-nineteenth century. Later chapters are devoted to John Wesley Powell, who after the Civil War attempted to introduce enlightened land policies in the arid West; Gifford Pinchot, Theodore Roosevelt's chief forester; ]ohn Muir, who popularized the gospel of wilderness preservation; Stephen Mather, who launched the National Park Service; and Aldo Leopold, advocate of an ethical attitude toward the land. Other chapters deal with Harold Ickes, who as Franklin D. Roosevelt's secretary of the interior spurred conservation efforts and encouraged economic recovery from the Great Depression; David Brower, the controversial executive director of the Sierra Club; and Rachel Carson and Barry Commoner, who alerted Americans to the dangers of an environment increasingly polluted by toxic chemicals.

From inside the book

Contents

Introduction
1
The Forerunners Thoreau Olmsted Marsh
9
John Wesley Powell
39
Gifford Pinchot
61
John Muir
85
Stephen Mather
111
Aldo Leopold
134
Harold Ickes
152
Rachel Carson
177
David Brower
196
Barry Commoner
221
Conclusion
246
Notes
251
Bibliographical Essay
265
Index
283
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1988)

Douglas H. Strong, a professor of history at San Diego State University, is the author of Tahoe: An Environmental History (Nebraska).

Bibliographic information