The first biography of a visionary biologist whose groundbreaking
ideas regarding wildlife and science revolutionized national parks.
When twenty-three-year-old George Meléndez Wright arrived in Yosemite
National Park in 1927 to work as a ranger naturalist—the first
Hispanic person to occupy any professional position in the National
Park Service (NPS)—he had already visited every national park in the
western United States, including McKinley (now Denali) in Alaska. Two
years later, he would organize the first science-based wildlife survey
of the western parks, forever changing how the NPS would manage
wildlife and natural resources. At a time when national parks
routinely fed bears garbage as part of “shows” and killed
“bad” predators like wolves, mountain lions, and coyotes,
Wright’s new ideas for conservation set the stage for the modern
scientific management of parks and other public lands. Tragically,
Wright died in a 1936 car accident while working to establish parks
and wildlife refuges on the US-Mexico border. To this day, he remains
a celebrated figure among conservationists, wildlife experts, and park
managers. In this book, Jerry Emory, a conservationist and writer
connected to Wright’s family, draws on hundreds of letters, field
notes, archival research, interviews, and more to offer both a
biography of Wright and a historical account of a crucial period in
the evolution of US parks and the wilderness movement. With a foreword
by former NPS director Jonathan B. Jarvis, George Meléndez Wright is
a celebration of Wright’s unique upbringing, dynamism, and enduring
vision that places him at last in the pantheon of the great American
conservationists.
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The Fight for Wildlife and Wilderness in the National Parks
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226824956
Publisert
2023
Utgiver
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter