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Show 622. provide more complete bibliographies. (441) Muir's correspondence to Johnson in the 1890's: see the Johnson Papers at the Bancroft Library. Most of these are included in Hadley's study. (442) Muir, Johnson, and the Sierra Club: see Holway Jones, John Muir and the Sierra Club. (443) Muir always gave Johnson credit for the idea of Yosemite National Park: Johnson Papers, Dec. 24, 1901; Hadley, p. 642. (445) Sierra Club as "defense association": Jones, John Muir and the Sierra Club, pp. 7-11. (446) Progressives: see Chapter 4, "What Manner of Men: The Progressive Mind," in George E. Mowry, The California Progressives (Berkeley: U.C. Press, 1951). (44 7) "To explore, enjoy, and render accessible . . .": Jones, John Muir and the Sierra Club, p. 173. (447) "secular religion": Sax, Mountains Without Handrails . . . , p. 2. (448) The professional standing of preservationists: Sax, Mountains Without Handrails, p. 54. (448) Donald Worster, University of Hawaii, "The Protestant Roots of American Environmentalism," unpublished paper. (448) "We gave up our belief . . .": Roderick Nash, "Can We Afford Wilderness," Environment, Man, Survival: Grand Canyon Symposium, p. 102. (448) "It follows . . .": Nash, "Can We Afford Wilderness," p. 104 (449) "The primary function of national forests . . .": |