Ansel Adams

1902 - 1984
Ansel Adams with Camera, photo from http://www.sierraclub.org/ansel_adams/about.asp
  • The noted photographer and conservationist often credited Muir as an inspiration.
  • In 1997, a new book of Ansel Adams photography was published with Muir's writings; America's Wilderness
  • Wallace Stegner wrote, "A place is not fully a place until it has had its poet. Yosemite and the Sierra Nevada have had two great poets, Muir and Adams."
  • According to Adams biographer Therese Lichtenstein, "Although Adams felt that Muir's writing was too elaborate, he nonetheless shared his love of the wilderness and his conservationist ethics."
  • Adams joined the Sierra Club in 1916. Beginning in 1919, he spent four summers as custodian at the Club's LeConte Memorial Lodge in Yosemite Valley. In 1934, Adams was elected as a member of the Board of Directors of the Sierra Club, a role he maintained for 37 years.
  • Adams' 1938 book The Sierra Nevada and the John Muir Trail, was influential in fulfilling John Muir's dream to add the wilderness region north of Sequoia National Park to the National Park System. The park was proposed as "John Muir National Park." After a fierce batle in Congress, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt signed a bill March 4, 1940, establishing Kings Canyon National Park.
  • In 1955, Adams and Nancy Newhall organized the important exhibition "This is the American Earth." The exhibition focused on conservation ethics and ideals, and was displayed at the LeConte Lodge in Yosemite National Park. About half of the photographs from forty different photographers were those of Adams. In 1960, the Sierra Club published the book as its first "exhibit format" book, This is the American Earth, which still serves as a beautiful statement of conservation principles.
  • The Sierra Club made Adams an Honorary Vice-President in 1971.
  • Ansel Adams received the Sierra Club John Muir Award, its highest honor, in 1963. This was only the third time this Award was given. He received many other award's, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1980, for "his efforts to preserve this country's wild and scenic areas, both on film and on earth."
  • In 1984, the year he died, the Ansel Adams Wilderness area was declared, covering 100,000 acres between Yosemite National Park and the John Muir Wilderness Area. In 1985, a year after Adams' death, a 11,700 foot peak located at the head of the Lyell Fork of the Merced River on the southeast boundary of Yosemite National Park was officially named Mt. Ansel Adams.
  • For more information, see Ansel Adams - documentary information from Sierra Club
Portrait of Ansel Adams by Cedric Wright, Sierra Club Archives.



Home | Alphabetical Index | What's New