John Muir photograph

John Muir

Use attributes for filter !
Gender Male
Death110 years ago
Date of birth April 21,1838
Zodiac sign Taurus
Born Dunbar
United Kingdom
Date of died December 24,1914
DiedDignity Health - California Hospital Medical Center
Los Angeles
California
United States
Children Wanda Muir Hanna
Helen Muir Funk
Spouse Louisa Wanda Strentzel
Education University of Wisconsin-Madison
Influences Henry David Thoreau
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Alexander von Humboldt
Place of burialMuir-Strentzel Hanna Cemetery, California, United States
FoundedSierra Club
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID447434

The Yosemite
Stickeen: An Adventure with a Dog and a Glacier
My first summer in the Sierra
John Muir: The Eight Wilderness Discovery Books
The Wilderness Journeys
Travels in Alaska
The mountains of California
The Story of My Boyhood and Youth
Thousand- mile Walk to the Gulf
Steep Trails
The writings of John Muir
The Cruise of the Corwin
Nature writings
The wilderness world of John Muir
Letters to a friend, written to Mrs. Ezra S. Carr, 1866-1879
John of the Mountains: The Unpublished Journals of John Muir
Essential Muir
Studies in the Sierra
John Muir: Spiritual Writings
America's Wilderness
Edward Henry Harriman
Collected Works of John Muir
Journeys in the Wildnerness: A John Muir Reader
John Muir, in His Own Words: A Book of Quotations
The American wilderness
Meditations of John Muir: Nature's Temple
John Muir's Book of Animals
West of the Rocky Mountains
Mountaineering essays
John Muir: His Life and Letters and Other Writings
John Muir's Last Journey: South To The Amazon And East To Africa: Unpublished Journals And Selected Correspondence
A Wind-Storm in the Forests
Northwest Passages: From the Pen of John Muir in California, Oregon, Washington, and Alaska
The Proposed Yosemite National Park
Gentle Wilderness: The Sierra Nevada
Yellowstone National Park
The American wilderness, in the words of John Muir
Letters from Alaska
The Boyhood of a Naturalist: By John Muir
Quotations of John Muir
Selected Writings
John Muir: My Life with Nature
Yosemite and the Sierra Nevada
South of Yosemite
Viajes Por Alaska
Wild Sheep
Discovery of Glacier Bay
A Rival of the Yosemite: The Canon of the South Fork of Kings River, California
To Yosemite and beyond
Still Walking the World: Quotations from the Writings of John Muir
Un été dans la Sierra
Our National Parks
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John Muir Life story


John Muir, also known as "John of the Mountains" and "Father of the National Parks", was a Scottish-born American naturalist, author, environmental philosopher, botanist, zoologist, glaciologist, and early advocate for the preservation of wilderness in the United States.

ArtUK: Six strange statues from new photographic database

Feb 29,2020 4:03 am

The First ever online catalogue of the UK's statues has been unveiled.

The Charity ArtUK has created a photographic database of 13,500 works of Public Art .

Queen Victoria is The Most honoured person with 175 works dedicated to her. The data also shows 77% of people depicted are male, 17% female and the rest a mixture of The Sexes .

The Catalogue , also reveals there More Than 20 statues to dogs and cats.

Here are a few of the statues with A Story to tell.

1. Queen Victoria still reigns

The Most honoured person in Britain is A Woman - Queen Victoria has 175 statues and memorials erected in her name.

This statue (above) in Salford is one of The Few to portray her as younger woman.

It was erected after The Queen 's visit to Manchester and Salford in 1851. Most of The Other Queen Victorias were installed in the 1890s and 1900s.

However, men still outnumber women by More Than four to one.

There are More Than 100 generals and More Than 50 admirals. Lord Nelson has 12 statues, Gladstone six.

Much has been done in recent years to try to improve the gender disparity.

One recent installation is Mary Anning , the Fossil Hunter , in Lyme Regis .

The Work , by artist Denise Dutton, is just the latest in a series of women she has recently portrayed, among them the suffragette, Oldham's Annie Kenney and a memorial to The Women 's Land Army.

" There's just been a thrust over The Last couple of years to show what women have done, " she says. " I wanted to show she was A Woman of purpose. I wanted her striding off. She was quite determined. "

One problem in capturing a likeness is how often women were overlooked in their time and did not receive official portraits. There is just one painting And One pastel of Mary Anning to work from.

The Likeness of her dog Tray came from Anning's own sketch.

2. The Brown Dog of Battersea The Bbc is not responsible for the content of external sites.

When protesters in Bristol because of his links to slavery, it made headlines.

The Catalogue reveals that there are still a few remaining memorials to people with close links to The Slave trade.

This number might go up as more biographical detail is added to the entries.

However, This Was not the First Time a statue had led to public outrage. In 1906, a statue of a small brown terrier was erected in Battersea.

It was a memorial to a dog that had been dissected in a medical demonstration.

The Statue led to years of protests, rioting and eventually the original brown dog being removed in The Middle of The Night in 1910. A replacement statue was erected in 1985.

3. Where's Steve?

The empty plinth of Edward Colston is not the only missing statue in The Catalogue .

This foot belonging to The Runner gold medal winning, middle distance runner, Steve Ovett .

The Statue in Brighton was stolen in 2007.

The Bbc is not responsible for the content of external sites.

A new Steve was installed on Brighton seafront in 2017, but it is far from the only statue to have been taken.

4. Dudley The Cat The Bbc is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Dudley The Cat is one of More Than 20 cats and dogs to receive their own statue.

Dudley, however, is also a memorial to his owner, Liz Burrows.

Liz lived by the Union Canal in Linlithgow and was a leading figure in Burgh Beautiful, a programme to enhance The Local area.

When Liz died in 2012, this sculpture of her beloved rescue cat, Dudley was erected in her honour.

5. The Duke of Wellington (with traditional traffic cone)

Yes, The Catalogue 's official portrait of The Duke of Wellington in Exchange Square in Glasgow has him wearing a traffic cone.

Erected in the 1840s, The Statue of The Duke on his horse, Copenhagen, stands outside The City 's modern Art Gallery .

However, in recent years he has regularly been seen wearing a traffic cone, and at one point a blue and yellow knitted cone in support of Ukraine.

All attempts to free him of his plastic headgear are quickly thwarted. The Cone has become part of the artwork.

6. One Kangaroo The Bbc is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Beyond famous cats and dogs, there are many animal statues.

Cardiff has Billy the Seal, Scotland has two statues of Corporal Wojtek the Soldier Bear in Edinburgh and Duns.

Wojtek was adopted by the Polish army and is said to have helped carry ammunition during The Battle of Monte Cassino .

The Bbc is not responsible for the content of external sites.

There is, however, according to The Catalogue only one kangaroo in Hobart Place, Melbourne, Chelmsford.

However, The Catalogue is still being added to so if someone discovers a second kangaroo ArtUK would be glad to hear.



Source of news: bbc.com

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