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William Frederic Badč served on the Sierra Club board
of directors for nearly three decades. He was the third President of the Sierra Club,
serving for three years.
Most importantly, perhaps, he was the editor of the Sierra
Club Bulletin for twelve years. It was his editorial skill that transformed the
Bulletin from a periodical of primarily local interest to a leading national publication
on wilderness preservation and conservation.
After John Muir's death in 1914, Muir's daughters Wanda and Helen chose Badč to edit
their father's unpublished papers. He was responsible for editing Muir's books A
Thousand Mile Walk to the Gulf, The Cruise of the Corwin, Steep
Trails, and The Life and Letters of John Muir.
For the latter work, Badč had hoped to locate a thousand letters; he ultimately
accumulated nearly double that number. In a garret in Indiana he discovered Muir's
collection of botanical specimens, the remnants of a trip through Canada. From the dates
and notations on these specimens, Dr. Badč was able to trace Muir's movements of a little
known period of his life.
Badč's papers, especially those relating to John Muir, may today be found in the
University of the Pacific, Holt-Atherton Library Special Collections.
Badeč's professional life was also interesting. He was a professor at the Pacific
School of Religion in Berkeley. A theologian and an archaeologist, he graduated at
Moravian College, Pennsylvania in 1892,the same year the Sierra Club was established.
Later he received a B.D. degree from both the Moravian Theological Seminary and Yale, and
a Ph.D degree in 1898.
He studied geology and mineralogy for several years, and pursued undergraduate courses
at the university of Berlin in 1905-06, and in Paris in 1909. Beginning his career as a
professor of Greek and German in Moravian College, and for years as professor of Hebrew
and Old Testament Literature in the Moravian theological seminary, in 1902 he accepted the
position of chair of Old Testament Literature and Semitic languages at the Pacific School
of Religion. He served in this position for the rest of his life, but also served as dean
and acting president in later years. In 1928 he pursued archeological research in
Palestine. Excavations conducted under his supervision resulted in the discovery of the
ruins of several cities, as well as many antiquities. He was the author of several
theological books and reports of his archeological expeditions, and also served as editor
of Moravian publications.
Later, he was instrumental in founding the California Botanical Society in 1913, and
was president of the California Associated Societies for the Conservation of Wild Life.
In 1906 he married Evelyn Marianne Ratcliff, whom he had met on a Sierra Club outing
and who, like him, was fond of mountain climbing and outdoor life. She died the next year,
leaving a daughter. In 1917, he married Elizabeth Le Breton Marston, another member of the
Sierra Club whom he had met on its outings, and this union resulted in two more children.
For more about Dr. Badč and his Sierra Club activities and adventures, see the Tribute to William Frederic Badč by William E. Colby, which
also contains a comprehensive biographical timeline.
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