Sierra Club Home Page   Environmental Update   My Backyard
chapter button
Explore, enjoy and protect the planet
Click here to visit the Member Center.         
Search
Take Action
Get Outdoors
Join or Give
Inside Sierra Club
Press Room
Politics & Issues
Sierra Magazine
Sierra Club Books
Apparel and Other Merchandise
Contact Us

Join the Sierra ClubWhy become a member? Explore, Enjoy and Protect

Backtrack
Join or Give Main
In This Section
Join Online Now!
Make a Donation
Why Join the Sierra Club
Renew your Membership
Mail-In Form
   
  More Ways to Give
Gift Membership
Life Membership
Monthly Giving
John Muir Society
Commemorative & Memorial Gifts
Planned Giving
Non-U.S. Residents
Canadian Residents
En Espaņol
Donate Stock

Read the latest issue of the Rachel Carson Society Newsletter

Join or Give
Planned Giving: Rachel Carson Society

Silent SpringWhen author and marine biologist Rachel Carson died of breast cancer at the age of 56 in 1964, she left a substantial bequest to the Sierra Club. This bequest included future royalties from sales of Silent Spring, the landmark book that exposed the ecological and health hazards of DDT and other chemical pesticides.

Her legacy also led the Sierra Club to create The Rachel Carson Society, designed to honor and recognize individuals who make a commitment to the environment by including the Sierra Club or The Sierra Club Foundation in their estate plans. Informing us of your estate plans enables us to properly express our gratitude. Membership in The Rachel Carson Society also includes:

  • Listing your name in our Annual Report alongside other members of the Rachel Carson Society, unless you prefer to remain anonymous.
  • Informing you of any changes in the tax law that may affect your gift.
  • Inviting you to special Sierra Club events in your area.
  • Sending you a Sierra Club calendar each year.

For Further Information

Rachel Carson knew that her life's work was only the beginning, that her contribution would be lost if future generations did not build upon what she started. A bequest or life income trust to benefit the Sierra Club's work is a commitment to the Earth's future. Your plans may allow you to create an enduring conservation legacy that meets both your financial and philanthropic goals. Gift Planning staff are available to provide you assistance in directing a gift to the Sierra Club or The Sierra Club Foundation. Let us know if you would like information and confidential assistance: Request Information or Inform us of your gift.

We look forward to welcoming you as a new member of The Rachel Carson Society. Contact us.


Rachel Carson's Environmental Legacy

by Marcia Mueller

Rachel Carson was one of those unique individuals whose life and work dramatically influenced society. She encouraged people to question and challenge our view of man's relationship with the natural world. By combining her skills as a trained biologist with her extraordinary literary skills, she told the world about the beauty and mystery of the environment.

Her career as a biologist and Chief Editor with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service allowed her to use her exceptional talents in many ways. She was able to express complicated scientific concepts in a way that made the information accessible to the general populace. A major portion of her work dealt with marine environments. She wrote three highly acclaimed books about the sea: Under the Sea Wind, The Sea Around Us, and The Edge of the Sea.

In what came to be known as her most famous book, Silent Spring, she sounded a global alarm about the threat of chemical pesticides. Her meticulous scientific research coupled with her exceptional writing ability enabled her to create a book that compelled the world to look at nature in a new way. The more Rachel Carson explored the use of pesticides, the clearer she was about her need to write the book, "What I discovered was that everything which meant the most to me as a naturalist was being threatened, and that nothing I could do would be more important." (Paul Brooks, The House of Life)

In addition to her research and writing, Rachel Carson was also the major care-giver for her family. Though she never married, she cared for her mother and two nieces. Nearing her fiftieth birthday she adopted her niece's orphaned five year old son. Her own health began to fail while she was working on Silent Spring. Despite illness, she always managed to put her personal challenges aside in order to complete the important projects that faced her. She died of cancer in 1964 at the age of fifty-six.

Rachel Carson's strength of character and commitment to preserving, conserving, and enhancing our environment is inspirational to people across the world. She was a visionary with the heart of a poet who optimistically believed that there was hope in the reparation of mankind's relationship with nature.


Up to Top


HOME | Email Signup | About Us | Contact Us | Terms of Use | © 2008 Sierra Club