| John
Muir's Connection with Pacific
-- John Muir (1838-1914) is arguably California's most important
historical personality and the most widely recognized environmentalist
in American history. Born in Dunbar, Scotland, Muir immigrated
to the United States with his father and two siblings in 1849.
After years of laboring on a Wisconsin farm, Muir turned his
energies toward mechanical inventions but remained fascinated
with "all things wild." That curiosity led to a lifetime
of investigation of the natural world and the role humans play
in using, conserving, and preserving natural resources. Muir
has often been described as the father of the modern conservation
movement. He was that and more. John Muir was the first naturalist
to cross the boundary between conservation and advocacy of preservation
of species and places merely because they exist. He argued for
preservation of flora, fauna and their habitats as essential
to the health of the planet and to the souls of men, women,
and children. He also believed that rocks, trees, water, and
air possess sentient properties deserving respect, scientific
investigation, and most importantly, legal protection. A product
of the nineteenth century, Muir's legacy flowered in the twentieth
century as his philosophies, publications, and private papers
came to be appreciated, studied, and widely disseminated.
Following his death in 1914, Muir's papers remained scattered
among family members and his publishers. In time, some of these
collections made their way into various institutions including
the Bancroft Library, Huntington Library, and the University
of Wisconsin. Several of Muir's descendants attended University
of the Pacific during the 1940s and 1950s. In 1970, the heirs
of Muir's two daughters, Wanda Muir-Hanna and Helen Muir-Funk,
entrusted University of the Pacific with the majority of John
Muir's manuscripts and personal papers. That indefinite loan
led to additional acquisitions, including most of Muir's personal
library and a portion of his office furniture from his home
in Martinez. In 1986, with publication of a microfilm edition
of Muir's Papers and a guide to the collection, the scholarly
world at last possessed a tool to access the private, as well
as the public John Muir. But no academic center existed to acknowledge
Muir or to promote his legacy.
That changed in 1989, when the John Muir Center for Regional
Studies was created within the College of the Pacific to foster
a closer academic relationship between University of the Pacific
and the larger community of scholars, students and citizens
interested in John Muir and regional studies. The Center's broadest
purpose was described by its first director, Ronald Limbaugh:
"to promote the study of California and its impact upon
the global community." Limbaugh's vision of the Center
built upon the rich legacy of the Muir family's bequest. Muir
Center, in cooperation with
Holt Atherton Special Collections within the University
Library, continues to honor the close family connection to Pacific
in promoting the good name and legacy of California and the
world's champion of wild places--John Muir.
|