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MAC Yosemite - Historical Background
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The incredible beauty of Yosemite began about 130 million years ago when a 400-mile fault line, along what is now the eastern edge of the Sierras, broke lose, and the ground on the western side was forced up to heights of over 10,000 feet. During the Ice Age, Yosemite Valley lay under 6,000 feet of ice, the Tuolumne Meadows Visitors Center under 2,000 feet. Over the millions of years since, the ice and erosion sculpted the Yosemite area into the spectacular scenery you see today.

Some 4,000 years ago, Native Americans moved into the Sierras from the east, probably looking for game and water in dry years. Later, Miwok-speaking people moved into the same area from California's central valley. Gradually the two groups merged, and for centuries they were a peaceful people living a "hunter-gatherer" life in the greater Yosemite area, including the Mono Lake region, where the group came to be known as the Paiutes. They spent summers in Yosemite Valley, which they called "Ahwahnee" and moved to the lowlands when winter came.

Native -American Displacement

European-Americans came to the area in the 1850s looking for gold. They forced the Miwoks out of the central valley and into the mountains, despite the harsh climate. As the search for gold continued, clashes between the Native Americans and European Americans increased, with the European Americans rounding up bands of Indians and forcing them into the Mono Lake and other areas beyond the mountains. By the 1870s, there were fewer than 50 Miwoks in Yosemite Valley and the area around it. Today, visitors can hear this story at the Indian Village of Ahwahnee.

Word of the wonders of Yosemite spread quickly. In 1855, James Mason Hutchings brought the first group of tourists to the valley from San Francisco. Artist Thomas Ayres was one of the visitors and his sketches spread the fame of the area even more rapidly. Hutchings continued to promote the area, and soon roads and crude hotels were built, allowing for more and more visitors.

Early Conservation Efforts

Early conservationists, I.W. Raymond and Fredrick Law Olmstead (the landscape artist who later created New York's Central Park) visited Yosemite and believed it should be preserved. They worked with Congress to protect the area. On June 30, 1864, President Abraham Lincoln signed a bill that granted Yosemite Valley and the Mariposa Grove of Big Trees to the State of California, effectively creating the world's first national park and limiting development in those two, small areas.

Rampant growth, however, continued outside the protected areas. Many, including Hutchings, scrambled to create hotels and other services to profit from the growing number of tourists. Logging, mining and stock grazing boomed as well, threatening to degrade the area.

John Muir

John Muir first visited the park in 1868, returning the next summer to work as a sheepherder in the high country. In 1869, he moved into Yosemite Valley, doing odd jobs and building a cabin on Yosemite Creek. In 1871, he wrote the first of a series of newspaper articles that spawned much of the public sentiment in favor of protecting the region. He joined forces with Robert Underwood Johnson, editor of the influential Century Magazine, and the two of them resolved to create a much larger Yosemite National Park.

On October 1, 1890, the U.S. Government enacted the law, which created a park that was about 25 percent larger than the current one. Surprisingly, it did not include either Yosemite Valley or the Mariposa Grove of Big Trees, which were still run by the State of California. The U.S. Army was put in charge of the National Park, and their work lives on today. They blazed trails, explored unknown areas, chased poachers and prepared many maps.

Political Differences

Of course, this dual control led to political differences. Soon John Muir, the newly formed Sierra Club and various citizens began to push for unification. In 1896, California formally deeded Yosemite Valley and the Mariposa Grove to the Federal Government. The army continued to run the park, headquartering in the Valley.

The first automobile arrived illegally in the Valley in 1900, and by 1907 the Yosemite Rail Road was completed between El Portal and Merced, making it even easier for tourists to visit. In 1913, the army legalized cars, and they came in droves.

It was during this period that public campgrounds, including Camp Curry and other concessions, were built. In 1913, San Francisco was granted the right to dam the Tuolumne River at Hetch Hetchy over years of protesting by John Muir, the Sierra Club and other environmentalists. Many consider this the nadir of the management of the park.

The National Park Service

The creation of a National Park Service to replace the army in 1916 signaled a change in thinking on park management. The new agency was charged to "conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and wildlife therein, and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations." This phrase still guides the National Park Service; it led to the creation of the many interpretation programs that are currently available to the public.

Today, science informs many of the efforts to preserve the park. Fire is regarded as a management tool, wild life is studied and protected, and artificial events like the Fire Fall from Glacier Point have been stopped.

The biggest challenge for the Park Service now, is how to keep the park accessible to the more than four million annual visitors without destroying it. To that end, park maintenance issues are constantly negotiated, such as the limitations on cars; they grow more stringent every year.







Copyright 1999-2005 Wcities, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Contact Wcities

Indian Village of Ahwahnee


View indigenous peoples' past inside the park
Behind Valley Visitor Center
(Yosemite Village)
Yosemite, CA 95389
United States
+1 209 372 0200
This replica of a Native American village gives you a taste of how the Miwok and Paiute peoples lived; the places where they prepared and cooked their food, and more. The village is setup in a more or less natural setting behind the Yosemite Museum Gallery. There is no fee for this attraction. Weather permitting, the staff of the Indian Cultural Exhibit puts on demonstrations of basket weaving, beadwork and game playing. These programs usually take place between 9a and noon and again between 1:30p. and 4:30p.

Review © 2007, Wcities
Indian Village of Ahwahnee photo by Dale Carlson
Photo: Dale Carlson
 

 
Mariposa Grove


Huge, ancient trees inside the park
Mariposa Grove
Yosemite, CA 95389
United States
+1 209 372 0200
The trees in this grove are more than 3,000 years old, more than 50 feet around, and reach up over 300 feet seemingly to touch the sky. You can drive to the lower edge of the grove, but parking is strictly limited and you may wait in line for quite a while; better to take the free shuttle from the Wawona General Store, which departs every 15 minutes from 9a to 4:30p. Note: Trailers and motor homes are not permitted on the Mariposa Grove Road.

Review © 2007, Wcities
Mariposa Grove photo by Roy Wood
Photo: Roy Wood
Mariposa Grove photo by Masatoshi Umemoto
Photo: Masatoshi Umemoto
Mariposa Grove photo by Chuck Gilbert
Photo: Chuck Gilbert
Mariposa Grove photo by albertyyu
Photo: albertyyu
Mariposa Grove photo by BigHairyDavid
Photo: BigHairyDavid
Mariposa Grove photo by Michael Soliman
Photo: Michael Soliman
Mariposa Grove photo by Patrick
Photo: Patrick
Mariposa Grove photo by Jay Fienberg
Photo: Jay Fienberg
Mariposa Grove photo by Glen Bolosan
Photo: Glen Bolosan
Mariposa Grove photo by Valerie Delmar
Photo: Valerie Delmar
Mariposa Grove photo by Declan McAleese
Photo: Declan McAleese
Mariposa Grove photo by Cari Rottenberg
Photo: Cari Rottenberg
Mariposa Grove photo by C. Okihara
Photo: C. Okihara
Mariposa Grove photo by Hans Kim
Photo: Hans Kim
Mariposa Grove photo by jhk_arts
Photo: jhk_arts
Mariposa Grove photo by Lee McEwan
Photo: Lee McEwan
Mariposa Grove photo by Kevin Schoenfeld
Photo: Kevin Schoenfeld
Mariposa Grove photo by Emma Goddard
Photo: Emma Goddard
Mariposa Grove photo by Reggie Tidwell
Photo: Reggie Tidwell
Mariposa Grove photo by Laura Brown
Photo: Laura Brown
Mariposa Grove photo by jeffccampbell
Photo: jeffccampbell
Mariposa Grove photo by Steven Dean
Photo: Steven Dean
Mariposa Grove photo by Kirin D.
Photo: Kirin D.
Mariposa Grove photo by Benjamin Ryzman
Photo: Benjamin Ryzman
Mariposa Grove photo by Bill Lynch
Photo: Bill Lynch
Mariposa Grove photo by Jeri Trice
Photo: Jeri Trice
Mariposa Grove photo by Dinno R
Photo: Dinno R
Mariposa Grove photo by Jenni Grant
Photo: Jenni Grant
Mariposa Grove photo by Sridhar Iyer
Photo: Sridhar Iyer
Mariposa Grove photo by Quentin Merigot
Photo: Quentin Merigot
Mariposa Grove photo by David McDowall
Photo: David McDowall
Mariposa Grove photo by Baignoire
Photo: Baignoire
Mariposa Grove photo by Sarah Depper
Photo: Sarah Depper
Mariposa Grove photo by Quentin Merigot
Photo: Quentin Merigot
Mariposa Grove photo by Niall McEntegart
Photo: Niall McEntegart
Mariposa Grove photo by Muthu Annamalai
Photo: Muthu Annamalai
Mariposa Grove photo by Rich Wilber
Photo: Rich Wilber
Mariposa Grove photo by Norman Chmelar
Photo: Norman Chmelar
Mariposa Grove photo by Dolan Greene
Photo: Dolan Greene
Mariposa Grove photo by Jay and Megan Dougherty
Photo: Jay and Megan Dougherty
Mariposa Grove photo by Edmond Lau
Photo: Edmond Lau
Mariposa Grove photo by Floyd Watson
Photo: Floyd Watson
Mariposa Grove photo by Solitaire_G
Photo: Solitaire_G
 

 
Tuolumne Meadows Visitors Center


East entrance information
off East Hwy 120
(Yosemite Valley)
Yosemite, CA 95389
United States
+1 209 372 0263
Open year-round (weather permitting), this center is the place to start when you enter Yosemite from the east via Highway 120. Located about a mile inside the east entrance, the center offers maps, books, park orientation materials and current information on trails. The station also offers campfire programs nearby. These campfires take place on summer nights and last about an hour. Rangers lead a variety of daytime nature walks in the area as well; schedules are posted daily in the station. This resource center is open all year, weather permitting.

Review © 2007, Wcities
Tuolumne Meadows Visitors Center photo by wcities
Photo: wcities
 

 
Other Schmapplets in this city related to "Yosemite - Historical Background"
Yosemite
Yosemite - Neighborhood Guide
Yosemite - Where to Stay
Yosemite - Dining & Drinking
Yosemite - Art & Entertainment

Other nearby cities:
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San Francisco (223 miles)
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Berkeley (224 miles)
Napa Valley (250 miles)
Los Angeles (433 miles)
Las Vegas (462 miles)

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