THE SEQUOIA NATIONAL PARK
OTHER PEOPLE'S SEQUOIAS
T was to preserve these trees from destruction that
Congress created the national park in 1890; and yet, with the one
exception of the General Sherman Tree, the greatest trees and all the
finest groups of greater trees in the Giant Forest, the grove of largest
trees, are not the property of the nation but of individuals. The park
was created out of public lands without provision for acquiring the
private holdings that happened to lie within its boundaries.
What the park's creation, therefore, has done for
most of the oldest and largest sequoias is merely to make it
unprofitable to cut and market them.
But owners cannot be expected to forego profit when,
with the park's inevitably increasing popularity, these holdings acquire
earning ability. Once visitors begin to throng the park, no law can
prevent the fencing of these Big Tree clumps for the charging of
admissions; nor can the public welfare control the kind and appearance
of the hostelries which some day surely will be built beneath some of
our greatest sequoias, nor even stop the raising of spiral stairways
round their great trunks to lookouts and lunch platforms among their
branches.
The time has come for public-spirited citizens to
combine subscriptions to save them, under the provision of the Sundry
Civil Act of March 3, 1915 (38 U. S. Stat. 863), which authorizes the
Secretary of the Interior to accept patented land or other right of way
whether over patented or other land in the Sequoia National Park that
may be donated for park purposes.
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"DEEP IN THE WOODY WILDERNESS" Photograph by George F. Belden
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VISTAS OF THE GIANT FOREST
Many of these trees were growing thriftily when Christ was born
Photograph by Lindley Eddy
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ALTA PEAK FROM MORO ROCK Photograph by Lindley Eddy
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ALTA MEADOWS NEAR THE GIANT FOREST Photograph by H. C. Tibbitts
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SUNSET FROM THE RIM OF MARBLE FORK CANYON Photograph by Lindley Eddy
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THE SIERRA CLUB IN CAMP Photograph by C. H. Hamilton
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THE CELEBRATED KINGS RIVER CANYON Photograph by H. C. Tibbitts
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KAWEAH PEAKS NEAR THE CANYON OF THE KERN Photograph by H. C. Tibbitts
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MIDDLE FORK OF THE KINGS RIVER Photograph by H. C. Tibbitts
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UNIVERSITY PEAK FROM KEARSARGE PASS Photograph by H. C. Tibbitts
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THE FALLEN GIANT
This trunk measures 288 feet. Sequoia wood is almost indestructible by
fire. This tree may have been prostrate for many centuries
Photograph by Lindley Eddy
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yard1/seki4.htm
Last Updated: 30-Oct-2009
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