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David R. Brower (1912-2000) - Co-Founder of GCI |
David Ross Brower was born in Berkeley,
California on July 1,1912. He first visited the High Sierra and
Yosemite National Park when he was only six years old, and by the
mid 1930s, he had become nationally known for his climbing and ski-mountaineering
exploits, credited with 70 first ascents in the Western United States.
In the late 1930s, as a key organizer in the campaign to create
Kings Canyon National Park, Brower began a career that had a profound
impact on the state of America’s wild lands. Mr. Brower joined
the Sierra Club in 1933, became a member of its board of directors
in 1941, and served as the organization's first executive director
from 1952 to 1969.
David Brower played a major role in protecting our national parks
system from dams and reservoirs. He successfully led the fight to
keep a dam from being built that would have flooded Dinosaur National
Monument on the Upper Colorado River. In the battle to preserve
that place and our parks system as a whole, it was agreed that a
dam and reservoir would be built in lesser known and recognized
Glen Canyon.
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David Brower
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“America’s Most Regretted Environmental Mistake”
After this compromise had been agreed upon, Mr. Brower went to see Glen
Canyon. He had heard that Glen Canyon was a treasure that must be preserved
for all future generations and realized once he arrived that this was
not a place for a reservoir. David Brower declared that flooding Glen
Canyon under the depths of a stagnant reservoir would come to be America’s
most regretted environmental mistake. He worked hard to stop Glen Canyon
Dam from being completed and was only a few feet from the desk of decision
makers the day the gates on the dam were closed, trying one last attempt
to keep the waters of the Colorado River from backing up and flooding
spectacular Glen Canyon. |
Grand Canyon Dams Victory
Together with Eliot Porter and the Sierra Club, he created the book,
“The Place No One Knew,” as a testimony to Glen Canyon’s
unparalleled beauty and as a reminder of the value of wild and natural
places. From his fights to save Glen Canyon, David Brower went on to keep
dams out of Marble and Grand Canyons for generations to come. Quickly
rising to define the modern environmental conservation movement, Brower’s
tactics were well planned and to the point. The most famous of his “Grand
Canyon Battle Ads” asked readers “Should We Also Flood the
Sistine Chapel So Tourists Can Get Nearer the Ceiling?” and sparked
a nation-wide protest against the planned dam project in the Canyon.
In 1969 he founded Friends of the Earth, where he created the League
of Conservation Voters, and initiated the founding of independent FOE
organizations in several countries. FOE now has branches in sixty-six
countries. |
David Brower Photographing Glen Canyon
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He was re-elected to the Sierra Club board in 1983, 1986,
1995 and in 1998, helping to create national parks and seashores in Kings
Canyon, the North Cascades, the Redwoods, the Golden Gate, Great Basin,
Alaska, Cape Cod, Fire Island, and Point Reyes; and in protecting primeval
forests in the Olympic National Park, and wilderness on San Gorgonio.
He was instrumental in the Sierra Club’s decision to support decommissioning
Glen Canyon Dam to restore the integrity of the Colorado River in Glen
and Grand Canyons. David Brower was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize
three times (in 1978, 1979 and again in 1998–jointly with Professor
Paul Ehrlich). He was the founder and Chairman of Earth Island Institute
and led conservation battles from 1938 until his death at age 88 in November,
2000.
Reversing “America’s most regretted environmental
mistake”
In 1996, David Brower joined the board of the fledgling Glen Canyon Institute.
In October, 1998, David Brower was awarded the Blue Planet Prize for his
environmental accomplishments. The Blue Planet Prize is awarded annually
by the Asahi Glass Foundation of Japan and is the richest environmental
prize in the world. He used part of the prize money in a challenge grant
to help the still young Glen Canyon Institute develop and work toward
its stated mission to restore a free-flowing Colorado River through Glen
and Grand Canyons. David Brower never forgot the importance and splendor
of Glen Canyon, the heart of the Colorado River, and remained a strong
supporter of draining Lake Powell Reservoir and restoring Glen Canyon
throughout his life. |
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