To the White Clouds: Idaho's Conservation Saga, 1900-1970
Autor J.M. Neilen Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 feb 2005
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780874222760
ISBN-10: 0874222761
Pagini: 215
Dimensiuni: 167 x 208 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Washington State University Press
ISBN-10: 0874222761
Pagini: 215
Dimensiuni: 167 x 208 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Washington State University Press
Descriere
In the 1960s, a mining corporation quietly applied to build a road to the base of Castle Peak, located in Idaho's magnificent and pristine White Clouds mountain range. That simple request, initially publicized by the Forest Service, brought a challenge to the Mining Act of 1872 and ignited a controversy that stirred a nation and quite possibly determined the results in Idaho's race for governor in 1970. The state's long-held view was that environmental protection and economic expansion were compatible. Yet the issue was not simply wilderness preservation versus industrial development. The enactment of the 1872 Mining Law meant that if prospectors and miners filed claims and if they requested approval to build a road to reach that claim--even on federal land deep within the Challis National Forest--no government official, from the governor of Idaho to federal representatives from the Forest Service, had the power to deny them. Environmental groups were infuriated. One of the first to sound the alarm was the Idaho Alpine Club based in Idaho Falls. The fight was on. Painstakingly researched, author JM Neil describes how Idaho arrived at the confrontation over the White Clouds in 1970 and how it was finally resolved. He explains how a state particularly jealous of its rights and suspicious of any federal control came to have millions of acres of federally protected wilderness. Neil also covers a surprising range of other topics integral to Idaho's conservation history, such as environmental pollution and the Depression era's role in changing Idaho's perception of conservation. From a stance of protecting only animals favored for hunting and fishing and killing those species' predators, toprotecting all wild animals, Idaho has vastly changed its position. In addition, through the stories of Shoshone Falls, Heyburn Park, Payette Lakes, the Sawtooth Mountains, Craters of the Moon, Bechler Meadows, and the Idaho Primitive Area, the author chronicles the reform in local attitudes toward scenic preservation and the long history of its game preserves. He also notes the reasons these preservation projects succeeded or failed. To the White Clouds: Idaho's Conservation Saga, 1900-1970 provides a fascinating look at how Idaho's approach toward conservation came to be, and the significant impact that the state's related policies have had on residents, influencing the availability of state resources, choices of recreational activities, and even political outcomes.
Notă biografică
Born in Boise, J. M. Neil is a third-generation Idahoan who has always been interested in the history of his home state. Neil is the author of several other books and has published major articles in a wide variety of scholarly journals and magazines, and presented public lectures throughout the United States. He was Executive Director of the Idaho Bicentennial Commission, Boise, from 1972 to 1976, and was Assistant Director of the Idaho Humanities Council, Boise, from 1990 to 1991.
Premii
- Idaho Library Association Book Award Nominee, 2005