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by James Keough*
Warren Olney was drawn to California by reports of spectacular mountain
scenery. Born in Iowa, he had fought in the Civil War and studied law at the University of
Michigan before journeying west in 1868, the year John Muir arrived in San Francisco.
Unlike his future friend and colleague (who looked askance at the city and immediately
asked a passerby for the quickest route to the mountains), Olney had a wife and child to
support. He settled down to practice law. But he was an avid hiker and fisherman, and by
the time he met Muir in 1889, he had seen much of the Sierra and the Coast Range.
They met through a mutual friend, William Keith, the well-known landscape and portrait
painter who was also an enthusiastic outdoorsman. When Muir visited San Francisco from his
fruit ranch at Martinez, Keith was apt to send Olney word, and the three would meet in
Keiths studio to talk about "the mountains." Soon the number of people
drawn to these conversations (and, one suspects, to Muirs presence) grew beyond the
capacity of Keiths rather cramped and cluttered studio, and the meetings were moved
to Olneys more spacious law office in the nearby First National Bank Building at 101
Sansome Street. Among those attending were Joseph LeConte, J. h. Senger, William Dallam
Armes, Cornelius Beach Bradley and John C. Branner, all faculty members at Stanford or
Berkeley.
On Saturday, May 28, 1892, a formal meeting was held in Olneys office to organize
a "Sierra Club." A week later there was another meeting at the same site.
Twenty-seven charter members signed the articles of incorporation that Olney had drawn up.
Muir was elected president, Olney vice-president.
Olneys office continued to serve as headquarters during the first year of the
Clubs existence. Its first conservation effort, a successful campaign to remove
Yosemite Valley from state control and add it to the newly created national park
surrounding the valley, was mounted there.
These were years of intense activism prophetic of the Clubs work today. Meetings
and conferences were held and attended in San Francisco, Sacramento and Washington.
"I have a letter from Senator Perkins [U.S. Senator George C. Perkins, a charter
member of the Club]," Olney wrote Muir, "saying there is no money to make proper
surveys of the proposed boundaries [of the Tahoe National Forest]. When President Jordan
[David Starr Jordan, president of Stanford, also a charter member] was in Washington he
did what he could in the way of establishing boundaries. He found the Secretary of
Interior and the Commissioner of the Land Office in hearty accord with our scheme."
Olney and Muir established a close personal relationship on family hiking and camping
trips and Club outings.
Olneys tenure with the Sierra Club culminated in one of the most dramatic
conservation conflicts in the Clubs and in the nations history: the struggle
for Hetch Hetchy Valley. As mayor of Oakland (he had agreed to run only if he received
both the Republican and Democratic nominations). Olney had fought the private interests
controlling the Bay Areas water supply. He believed that the best way to remove that
supply from private hands and place it in municipal ownership was for the city of San
Francisco to acquire rights to the water of the Tuolumne River and to dam it where it
passed through Hjetch Hetchya miniature Yosemite Valleyin the upper reaches of
Yosemite National Park. Olney admitted the natural beauty of the site, but argued:
"Any other source will cost the tax payers of San Francisco, already heavily burdened
as a result of the recent earthquake and fire, ten to twenty million dollars more than
this one." He pointed out that only the Tuolomne, of all major Sierra streams, had no
significant claims on its water, though private interests were moving to make such claims.
He noted that those interests were also opposing acquisition of Hetch Hetchy and felt they
were "using" Club members who opposed the project.
The Hetch Hetchy Project was approved by a majority of San Francisco voters and by such
national figures as Theodore Roosevelt and Gifford Pinchot. But it was strongly opposed by
John Muir, Will Colby and others of Olneys friends in the Club. They believed it
would not only sacrifice a site of great natural beauty but would establish a precedent
for invading the integrity of the national parks in the name of utilitarian necessity.
When a poll of the members resulted in a vote of 589 to 161 against his position, Olney
resigned after seventeen years of dedicated service.
The ultimate victory of his Hetch Hetchy views hardly compensated for the painful loss
of intimacy with Muir, Colby and others of whom he was deeply fond. There was one
consolation. Hed helped establish the principle of forthright dissent among Club
membersand had been instrumental in creating an organization that was to expand in
significance for beyond his most hopeful dreams.
A group of Sierra Club members have establish a fund to commemorate the contribution of
Warren Olney to the founding of the organization. Checks should be made to The Sierra Club
Foundation. Contributions to this fund are fully deductible. Each gift will be divided.
One-third of the proceeds will be used for environmental litigation and two-thirds will be
used for charitable environmental programs.
*This article appeared in slightly altered form in
the 1978 February/March issue of SIERRA Magazine.
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