Key People in Conservation
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Transcript Key People in Conservation
Key People in Conservation
Outdoor Education
John James Audubon
Painted and
described the
birds of North
America.
Published life-sized
prints that are still
considered the
standard.
Audubon society
named in his honor.
Mary Austin
Wrote a book
dedicated to the
deserts of the
American
southwest.
Used very
descriptive
language in her
book The Land of
little rain.
Florence Merriam Bailey
Ornithologist and
nature writer.
Worked with
congress to pass
legislation
preventing
unnecessary bird
slaughter.
Hugh Bennett
Father of American
soil conservation.
Encouraged
conservation in 1920’s
& 1930’s.
Created the Federal
Soil Conservation
Service, now known as
Natural Resource
Conservation Service.
Rachel Carson
Wrote
Silent Spring
about pesticide abuse.
Spurred a nation into
action and started the
modern environmental
movement.
Her worked resulted
in nation wide ban of
DDT.
Anna Botsford Comstock
First person to bring
students and other
teachers outside to
study nature,
implemented course on
nature study in NY
public schools.
Encouraged
observation as the
best way to study
nature.
Jay “Ding” Darling
Attended UW where
he began working as a
cartoonist.
Published conservation
cartoons, designed the
first federal duck
stamp.
Appointed as the head
of the Bureau of
Biological Survey.
Founded National
Wildlife Federation.
Marjory Stoneman Douglas
Everglades:
River of Grass and
Wrote
mobilized Florida
against the
draining and
overdevelopment of
the everglades.
Founded Friends of
the Everlgades.
Rosalie Edge
One of the first
female leaders of the
conservation
movement.
Became active because
of outrage against the
Audubon Society.
Founded Hawk
Mountain Wildlife
Refuge.
William Temple Hornaday
Chief taxidermist of
U.S. National Museum.
Became president of
the Permanent Wild
Life Protective
Association.
Credited with saving
American Bison and
Alaskan Fur Seal from
extinction.
John F. Lacey
Wrote legislation that
made it illegal to ship
game across state
lines-the first federal
conservation law.
Lacey Bird Act of
1900, and several
other land
conservation acts
passed because of him.
Aldo Leopold
Father of Wildlife
management.
Served for 19 years in
United States Forest
Service before
working at UWMadison.
Founded the
Wilderness Society
while writing about
ethical and
conservation issues.
Robert Marshall
Founder of the
Wilderness society.
Helped to
preserve large
tracts of Alaska.
Shaped US
Forestry policy of
wilderness
management.
Stephen Mather
First director of
National Park
Service.
Evaluate possible
sites for National
Parks.
Felt scenery was an
important factor
for parks.
John Muir
Settled by Portage,
WI and attended UWMadison were he was
influenced to explore
nature.
Founded the Sierra
Club and helped
preserve Yosemite
Valley
Image is on the CA
quarter
Helen Nearing
Advocated self-
sufficient living and
back to the land
movement.
Developed
improvements for
maple syrup production
while advocating an
organic food approach,
wrote several books on
those areas.
Gaylord Nelson
From Clear Lake, WI.
Elected as state
senator, then
governor, and
eventually US senate
and attended
conservation tour with
JFK.
Principal founder of
“Earth Day.”
Frederic Law Olmsted
Brought Nature to
the city.
Designed Central
Park.
He was the first
prominent
Landscape
Architect
Sigurd Olson
Grew up and was
influenced by
Northern Wisconsin’s
nature.
Helped draft the
Wilderness Act of
1964 while serving as
president of
Wilderness Society.
He also helped
establish Voyageurs
National Park in
northern Minnesota.
George Perkins Marsh
America’s 1st
environmentalist.
Published Man and
Nature the first
book to pose
questions
concerning man’s
impact on the
environment.
Roger Tory Peterson
Published
Guide to
Birds and co-wrote
Wild America.
He served as editor of
Peterson Field Guides
and developed the
Peterson identification
system still used
today.
Gifford Pinchot
First chief
forester of US
Forest Service.
Advocated
conservation by
planned use and
renewal.
Coined the term
“conservation
ethic”.
John Wesley Powell
Lived a mountain man
lifestyle by exploring
the Rocky Mountains,
walking across WI,
taking passages on
Mississippi river.
Became second
director of US
Geological Survey
shaped Western Land
use policies
Theodore Roosevelt
Founded the
National Parks.
Created federal
wildlife and bird
refuges, set aside
land for nature
preserves.
Established the US
Forest Service
Henry David Thoreau
Wrote
On Walden
Pond that helped
start the
environmental
movement, a
reflection on simple
living in the natural
environment.