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Saving Grand Canyon: Dams, Deals, and a Noble Myth

Autor Byron E Pearson
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 24 sep 2019 – vârsta ani
2020 Winner of the Southwest Book Awards
2020 Spur Awards Finalist Contemporary Nonfiction, Western Writers of America 


The Grand Canyon has been saved from dams three times in the last century. Unthinkable as it may seem today, many people promoted damming the Colorado River in the canyon during the early twentieth century as the most feasible solution to the water and power needs of the Pacific Southwest. These efforts reached their climax during the 1960s when the federal government tried to build two massive hydroelectric dams in the Grand Canyon. Although not located within the Grand Canyon National Park or Monument, they would have flooded lengthy, unprotected reaches of the canyon and along thirteen miles of the park boundary.

Saving Grand Canyon tells the remarkable true story of the attempts to build dams in one of America’s most spectacular natural wonders. Based on twenty-five years of research, this fascinating ride through history chronicles a hundred years of Colorado River water development, demonstrates how the National Environmental Policy Act came to be, and challenges the myth that the Sierra Club saved the Grand Canyon. It also shows how the Sierra Club parlayed public perception as the canyon’s savior into the leadership of the modern environmental movement after the National Environmental Policy Act became law.

The tale of the Sierra Club stopping the dams has become so entrenched—and so embellished—that many historians, popular writers, and filmmakers have ignored the documented historical record. This epic story puts the events from 1963–1968 into the broader context of Colorado River water development and debunks fifty years of Colorado River and Grand Canyon myths.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781948908214
ISBN-10: 1948908212
Pagini: 368
Ilustrații: 28 b-w photos
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.64 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University of Nevada Press
Colecția University of Nevada Press

Recenzii

"Pearson’s determination to revise the public’s understanding of the controversy that surrounded the Grand Canyon during the 1960s certainly offers a useful corrective to various exaggerations and legends that have blossomed during the past half-century. He also offers the reader a thoughtful explication of Stewart Udall’s political difficulties, seeking as he did to accommodate the interests of Arizona’s development while pursuing an increasingly passionate agenda of environmental advocacy as secretary of the interior. Above all, Pearson’s detailed exploration of the crucial role of legislative affairs, incorporating as it does the dynamics of party politics, of bureaucratic ambitions, and of regional development, reminds us that we omit such careful study of institutions at our scholarly peril."
The Journal of Arizona History
  "Nature-loving readers will find value in his [Pearson's] insights both into a specific conservation milestone and into the broader sweep of the environmentalist movement's history."
Publishers Weekly

Notă biografică

Byron E. Pearson is an Arizona native, author, and environmental historian of the American West. He is a professor of history at West Texas A&M University and has published numerous articles and scholarly reviews in venues such as Forest History Today,The Western Historical Quarterly, and Pacific Historical Review.
 

Extras

Excerpt Chapter 1: “Something to be Skinned”

“I have come here to see the Grand Canyon,” Teddy Roosevelt told his audience of former Rough Riders, Arizona dignitaries, and ordinary citizens on May 6, 1903. Overcome by the “loneliness and beauty” of the chasm, the president asked Arizonans to not give in to the temptations of commercial and private development, and to leave the canyon alone. Be a good steward and preserve it for the entire country he said, for it is a place of “unparalleled” grandeur, unique in all the world.[i] 

Indeed it was, and still is today, despite the development of a massive tourist infrastructure on the south rim that TR would have undoubtedly viewed with distaste. Ironically, as he delivered the speech in which he told his audience not to “mar” the canyon with hotels, houses, or development of any kind and to refrain from treating it as “something to be skinned,” he did so while standing on the porch of a hotel close to the brink of the abyss. That irony reflects the juxtaposition many people in the last half of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries felt about the natural world. Although the Anglo-Americans who first wrote about it evaluated the canyon as to whether they could wring a profit from it, their words occasionally express the kind of awe that one typically finds in the writings of seventeenth-century enlightenment figures who struggled to find the language to describe the feelings of awe—and terror—such landscapes evoked.

Thus we have the scribblings of Lieutenant Joseph Christmas Ives who in 1857 wrote that the Colorado River would “remain forever undisturbed” along its “lonely and majestic way.” Geologist John Wesley Powell reflected in 1875 that the canyon was so “awful, sublime, and glorious” that words and “graphic arts” combined could not capture it. Railroad builder Robert Brewster Stanton occasionally paused from his 1890 survey to lift his eyes upward and write of the “flaming scarlet sandstone cliffs” above the inner gorge. Indeed, as TR spoke about preservation, the nation struggled to reconcile conflicting ideas about protecting nature and developing it in the name of progress. Although TR’s speech is best remembered for his admonition to protect Grand Canyon, he also extolled the virtues of western irrigation.[ii] And to place twentieth-century struggles over building dams in Grand Canyon into their proper historical context, it is with efforts to reclaim the West that we must begin.

[i]Roosevelt, “Speech at Grand Canyon, May 6, 1903,” printed in Coconino Sun, May 9, 1903. The title for this chapter is taken from the speech.
[ii]Joseph C. Ives, Report Upon the Colorado River of the West (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1861), 110; John Wesley Powell, Canyons of the Colorado (New York: Cosimo Publications, 2008; reprinted from 1895), 328; Robert Brewster Stanton, Field Notes of a Survey for the Proposed Denver, Colorado Cañon and Pacific Railroad from Green River, Utah, down the Green and Colorado Rivers to the Gulf of California; Incl. Expense Accounts, etc., vol. 3, May 10, 1889–April 30, 1890 (transcript), 108, 40, https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/510d47e2-c81b-a3d9-e040-e00a18064a99/book?parent=12b78680-c5bf-012f-c9a2-58d385a7bc34#page/21/mode/2up. accessed July 20, 2018.

Cuprins

Preface: Centennial Reflections
Introduction
Chapter 1: “Something to be Skinned”
Chapter 2: New Lines in the Sand
Chapter 3: Dinosaurs and Rainbows
Chapter 4: A Time for Water Statesmanship
Chapter 5: A “Fjord-like Setting”
Chapter 6: “A Little Closer to God”
Chapter 7: “Permanent Massive Things”
Chapter 8: Be Careful What You Wish For . . .
Chapter 9: Alternative Realities
Selected Bibliography
Acknowledgments
About the Author
 

Descriere

Saving Grand Canyon chronicles a century of attempts to build dams in Grand Canyon and why those attempts failed. It also demonstrates how the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) came out of these controversies and debunks the myth that the Sierra Club saved Grand Canyon and shows how the club parlayed this perception into the leadership of the modern environmental movement after NEPA became law.