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Muir’s heir keeping naturalist’s legacy alive


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By Linda Fine Conaboy

Many who live near or play in the Sierra are familiar with John Muir, but his great-great-grandson, not so much. However, Robert Hanna is a name to know for those with an interest in the outdoors.

Hanna, who works for California’s Assembly Republican Caucus, knows the woods and the mountains and the flowers and the trees. And he knows all about his great-great-granddad, although, of course, the two never met.

During a May 30 talk presented by the Friends of the Library to a full house at the South Lake Tahoe Library, Hanna gave an overview of all things Muir. Hanna offered more than what is usually presented about the famous Scottish naturalist. He painted an in-depth view of his family from Muir’s birth in 1838 in Dunbar, Scotland, to the present.

Robert Hanna has become an expert on all things John Muir. Photo/Denise Haerr

Robert Hanna has become an expert on all things John Muir. Photo/Denise Haerr

“I grew up learning about John Muir in a different way, from a family perspective,” he said. “I wanted to create a story of John and his legacy in-depth. I wanted to look at family history in a way that has not been seen before.”

And that’s what he did in his slide show, consisting of more than 100 images, displaying Muir’s sundry sides and personalities and introducing the audience to a no-nonsense, seemingly tough and resilient man and the large family, who throughout the years, have always supported him and his ideals. Hanna tossed out many vignettes and lots of narrative describing a large and boisterous group that he came to know through many family reunions staged mainly at the family’s large ranch holdings in Martinez.

“A lot of people think John Muir was born old,” Hanna laughed, referring to the often stern demeanor he presented in photographs.

However, when you learn about his early life in Scotland and later, in Wisconsin, perhaps there’s a reason for his unsmiling face. Muir was raised by a stern and religious father who mandated that he memorize and repeat nearly three-quarters of the Bible by the time he was 14. He also was required to perform myriad chores on the family farm; in fact, farming was, in his father’s mind, to be young John’s lot in life.

Little did he realize that his son was not destined to become a farmer. Turns out what young John loved most of all was books and machines — especially those machines he invented himself. Like the self-settling table saw and the barometer he constructed from a water clock powered by a stream on the family farm.

Then there was the clock desk, a contraption that not only rousted a student out of bed at a pre-set hour, but then automatically opened and closed various school books at designated times. He designed what he called a “loafer chair”, a device abhorred by any who might wish to slack off during the day. It soon became apparent that Muir was fascinated by clocks and incorporated them into many of his “timely” inventions.

He created some of these at the University of Wisconsin where they were discovered by Ezra Carr and his wife, Jeanne, who became his friend and encouraged him to put his ideas into print and were to play a pivotal role in his later life. The Carrs also introduced young John to Ralph Waldo Emerson, who also became his life-long friend.

The early adventures of John Muir were always interesting and always tempered with a distracting need to make enough money to feed himself. He left the university in 1863 for a foot tour of Wisconsin, Iowa, Illinois and Canada; a pivotal trek that Hanna said led to Muir’s devotion to and love of nature.

The loss of sight in both eyes and the eventual regaining of his vision led him to become extremely introspective. During this episode, he made a pact with God that if his sight returned, he would dedicate himself to nature, according to Hanna. He kept his word to God.

A 1,000-mile trek to Florida gained him a renewed closeness to Mother Nature and also, unfortunately, a raging bout of malaria. His recovery found him journeying to San Francisco — followed by a walking trip to Yosemite. The rest might be colloquially termed as history.

It is Hanna’s belief that time in nature can heal many ills and time spent with others in nature can bring about closeness and a bonding not to be gained elsewhere. For example, Muir cemented his relationship with Emerson during the poet’s brief visit to Yosemite; he was able to convince President Theodore Roosevelt to designate Yosemite a national park in 1890 after a rewarding trip throughout Yosemite’s vast wildness.

It is said that Roosevelt called his excursion with Muir, “some of the best three days in my life.”

Lest he become too much a hermit in the wilds, the Carr family lured Muir out of the woods and introduced him to Louie Strentzel, whom he married. He moved to the family farm in Martinez, made its orchard extremely profitable, thereby, finally becoming a man of money, and raised his two daughters there.

He was on his way back to Martinez, via train, when he developed pneumonia and died in Los Angeles in 1914 at age 76.

One issue Muir fought hardest for was the battle to save the glacial Hetch Hetchy Valley, which lies in the northeastern part of Yosemite National Park. Muir lost his fight and the O’Shaughnessy Dam was constructed 20 years after his death, in 1934, on the Tuolumne River, flooding the entire valley. The water stored there, to this day, travels 167 miles to San Francisco and remains The City’s main water source.

At the end of the fight Hetch Hetchy fight it is said that Muir weighed only 85 pounds. But in the end, he lost; however, now, his great-great-grandson is in the trenches, following his famous relative’s path, doing what he can to convince powerful lobbyists and anyone else who will listen, to drain the Hetch Hetchy Valley and store the water downstream.

“It’s political and it’s a big fight,” Hanna said. “It was wrong to destroy an icon within a national park. I’m going to keep fighting the good fight for as long as it takes.”

Hanna said that besides fighting some good fights, he’s happy now to be telling Muir stories and sharing Muir’s legacy. He closed his presentation with one of his favorite Muir quotes, said to be uttered after the defeat of the Hetch Hetchy project: “No matter, for I’ve had a grand life in these divine mountains and I may yet do something for those coming after me.”

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Comments (7)
  1. Kay Henderson says - Posted: June 2, 2015

    Terrific article on one of the best presentations I’ve ever heard. Mr. Hanna is an outstanding speaker, with much new material to present.

    My recent interest in John Muir began when I happened across a 2011 beautifully illustrated edition of “My First Summer in the Sierra” at the library. I was astonished at the beauty of the language.

    The forward says it better than I can. “Published in 1911, more than forty years after the fact, when Muir was in his 70s, it benefits from the older man’s perspective, as well as his considerable writing and editing skills, honed over the intervening decades in which he had used the written word to spread his gospel of Nature and become as well known as Yosemite itself. But it is based on the thirty-one-year-old’s journal, with all the fresh immediacy and ecstatic emotion of those initial moments of discovery.” P. viii

  2. Justice says - Posted: June 2, 2015

    A good story of a life well lived of a conservative and a conservationist. I couldn’t imagine what he would think now with all of the water going south out of the mountains for millions in a desert that is drying up the north state. The over-population of the state and the toll on the limited resources should concern all with the ability to see it. It is a disaster.

  3. TeaTotal says - Posted: June 2, 2015

    Attempting to hitch today’s rushbagger conservative wagon to American icons of true conservationists like John Muir and Teddy Roosevelt?-that’s despicable-even for you-the Hetch-Hetchy water goes to the Bay Area-not south-but you don’t have any facts-you have fox

  4. Justice says - Posted: June 2, 2015

    Try something intelligent for a change. You keep making anything you can invent a false political issue and then add name calling and dropping, baseless accusation and fabrication and outright lies. Is that the best you have? Can you try less at exposing yourself as something below a single cell of DNA.

  5. duke of prunes says - Posted: June 2, 2015

    ‘ You keep making anything you can invent a false political issue and then add name calling and dropping, baseless accusation and fabrication and outright lies.’
    Don’t give them your playbook.

  6. Kits Carson says - Posted: June 2, 2015

    Hey Tea-totaled: Have you missed the Aqueduct?? Take a drive down 395 (if you can find it.) It’s a pretty well known route on the Eastern Sierra. The water from here flows south to there and you can see the evidence. Plus Inyo Lake is now a dust bowl because LA types wanted water in the desert where they choose to live. KEYWORD: Desert

  7. nature bats last says - Posted: June 3, 2015

    LMAO justanass who turns everything he posts into a blast against anyone not like him. Thats almost everyone, with the exception of kitty, dogzilla deadgrass BO, to name the few there are.