Daily News (Los Angeles)

CONFRONTIN­G THE PAST

The Sierra Club, founded in California, is 130 years old today. It is one of the oldest environmen­tal nonprofits but it is struggling with its history.

- By KURT SNIBBE | Southern California News Group

The Sierra Club was founded May 28, 1892, with John Muir as its first president. Its first order of business was to defeat a proposal to reduce the boundaries of Yosemite National Park.

Today the Sierra Club’s history is being recast. A note on the organizati­on's website says: “We are revising this section of our website, which presents the Sierra

Club’s history in an insensitiv­e and exclusiona­ry way. We are committed to engaging more critically with our past and reckoning with the ways racism, sexism, and other systems of oppression have shaped our organizati­on.

Please check back soon for an updated page.”

The club that has 60 chapters nationwide (13 in California) and about 1.3 million members is reassessin­g its founder, the man known as the father of our national parks.

The Sierra Club issued a formal apology in July 2020 for racist remarks by Muir more than a century earlier.

Then-Executive Director Michael Brune said it was “time to take down some of our own monuments” as statues of Confederat­e officers and colonists came down across the U.S. in a reckoning with the nation’s racist history.

“He made derogatory comments about Black

The people’s trail?

There is a movement to rename the John Muir Trail. In 2018, seven Indigenous women hiked across the Sierra Nevada in an act of cultural reclamatio­n. The route was used by tribes in the Sierra for centuries before Muir discovered it, and it is known as the Nüümü Poyo, or the People’s Trail.

From north to south, the trail starts in Happy Isles in Yosemite Valley and winds to Mount Whitney, the tallest mountain in the contiguous U.S. The 221-mile trail ends at the Whitney Portal near Lone

Pine. Most of the trail lies above 8,000 feet in designated wilderness. It took 46 years to complete constructi­on, starting in 1938.

A lot to change

Muir was born in Scotland on April 21, 1838. He entered Yosemite Valley for the first time in 1868, and his writings about the area encouraged support for preservati­on of land in California and America.

Muir published six collection­s of writing while alive (four more were published posthumous­ly).

Muir was married, had two daughters and ran an orchard in Martinez, where his mansion is maintained by the Park

Service.

At least one high school, 21 elementary schools, six middle schools and one college are named after him, as well as a glacier, a mountain, a forest, a beach, a cabin, an inlet, a highway, a library, a motel, a medical center and a minor planet.

In 1914, Muir died in a Los

Angeles hospital on Christmas Eve.

The profile of Muir — with long beard, brimmed hat and walking stick, gazing at

Yosemite’s Half Dome — was stamped on the 2005 California quarter when the U.S. Mint was producing a commemorat­ive coin for every state. people and Indigenous peoples that drew on deeply harmful racist stereotype­s, though his views evolved later in his life,” Brune wrote on the group’s website. “As the most iconic figure in Sierra Club history, Muir’s words and actions carry an especially heavy weight. They continue to hurt and alienate Indigenous people and people of color.”

Muir was good friends with the founder of the American Eugenics Society and many early members of the Sierra Club were eugenicist­s as well, believing the genetic compositio­n of humans could be improved through controlled reproducti­on of different races and classes of people.

1900s: The club begins an organized outings program, with annual trips to the Sierra Nevada. President Theodore Roosevelt visits Yosemite with Muir and, two years later, the club’s campaign to return management of Yosemite Valley to the federal government from the state of California succeeds.

1910s: The National Park Service is created, with Stephen Mather, a Sierra Club member, as its first director. The California Legislatur­e passes a law to support constructi­on of the John Muir Trail in the Sierra Nevada.

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 ?? ?? Sierra Club logo, drawn from Yosemite Valley
Sierra Club logo, drawn from Yosemite Valley

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