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Re: The Brewer party, 150 years later

Posted: Sat Aug 27, 2011 8:46 am
by georged193
Thanks for this very valuable work-in-progress! For those who want to follow the expedition through the Sierra Nevada, there is a book published by the Yosemite Association (originally published in 1987, paperback republished in 1999. ISBN 0-939666-91-X) entitled "Such A Landscape-William Henry Brewer" written by William Alsup, a High Sierra backpacker and Historian. Alsup makes use of Brewer's diary, Field Notes, Letters and other Reports in this excellent book, and includes photographs he took of important backcountry sites the expedition visited. It may be available in your library or from online booksellers-don't know if they still have it at the Yosemite bookstore. For those who want to get a good view of Mt. Brewer and the Great Western Divide, I recommend taking the trail to Mitchell Peak, located in the Jenny Lakes Wilderness area next to Sequoia/Kings Canyon NP. The shortest way is by the Marvin Pass trailhead, but it will be a 2000 ft climb and a 3 mile somewhat-rough dirt road. You can google Mitchell peak and find descriptions online. You can do it as a dayhike, and you can expect some company at the summit from the fancy resort down below (500 bucks per couple per night). I did it as a backpack trip via Rowell Meadow trailhead, and this year the trail crew was busy redoing the leg that drops down to Williams Meadow, which makes a weekend loop trip very feasible. You can carry water up and find little tent sites near the top of the peak if you want to spend the night there-it was worth it! We had a snowbank a couple of weeks ago but it may be gone by now.

Re: The Brewer party, 150 years later

Posted: Sun Aug 28, 2011 4:40 pm
by TehipiteTom
georged193 wrote:Thanks for this very valuable work-in-progress! For those who want to follow the expedition through the Sierra Nevada, there is a book published by the Yosemite Association (originally published in 1987, paperback republished in 1999. ISBN 0-939666-91-X) entitled "Such A Landscape-William Henry Brewer" written by William Alsup, a High Sierra backpacker and Historian. Alsup makes use of Brewer's diary, Field Notes, Letters and other Reports in this excellent book, and includes photographs he took of important backcountry sites the expedition visited. It may be available in your library or from online booksellers-don't know if they still have it at the Yosemite bookstore.
I looked at that when it first came out, and have been kicking myself ever since for not buying it right away. It appears to be out of print, but it looks like there are some used copies out there. Anyway, I second the recommendation.

By the way, William H. Alsup also wrote Missing in the Minarets, about the search for Walter Starr in the 1930s. Fascinating read.

Re: The Brewer party, 150 years later

Posted: Sun Aug 28, 2011 5:16 pm
by Timberline
Kudos, Tom!
As folks back in the 1860's might've said, this is absolutely GRAND! Yeah, I understand that for a while you won't get to my "favorite" part of their journey (and you know where that would be). I was able to get, and thoroughly enjoy, a copy of Alsup's book at a used book store, but you've tackled so much more. And what a phenomenal story Brewer's writings convey in context about early California! During my first summer job with Sierra NF during college years, I had the fortunate experience to travel cross-country and "explore" on horseback some of the territory around Vermillion Valley and Balloon Dome exactly 100 years after the Brewer party's visit through there, and only later came to realize how close I came to touching some history that was so special to me. I immediately bought and read Clarence King's book as a result. Wrote my own story about it, even. Looking forward to following along with your continuing posts. Thanks much! =D>

Re: The Brewer party, 150 years later

Posted: Tue Jun 26, 2012 4:44 pm
by TehipiteTom
Brewer hasn't been the quickest adopter of social media (not surprising, considering that he died 100 years ago), but he has (finally) joined Twitter and Facebook.

Re: The Brewer party, 150 years later

Posted: Sat Mar 02, 2013 8:49 pm
by sekihiker
Cool site, Tom.

I can hardly wait for the mountains.

Re: The Brewer party, 150 years later

Posted: Sun Mar 03, 2013 2:05 pm
by TehipiteTom
Thanks!

Yosemite this June...SeKi next year...

Re: The Brewer party, 150 years later

Posted: Mon Mar 04, 2013 9:36 pm
by oldranger
Tom

It's about time! Can't you get them to move any faster? ;)

Mike

Re: The Brewer party, 150 years later

Posted: Mon Mar 04, 2013 9:55 pm
by mokelumnekid
Well thsi is absolutely wonderful. Thanks so much. As a Native son living in "exile" in the Pacific Northwest, this brings back wonderful thoughts.

Re: The Brewer party, 150 years later

Posted: Tue Mar 05, 2013 2:06 pm
by TehipiteTom
Thanks, mokelumnekid!
oldranger wrote:Tom

It's about time! Can't you get them to move any faster? ;)

Mike
I could, but then it all would be over sooner! :(

Re: The Brewer party, 150 years later

Posted: Tue Jun 18, 2013 8:43 am
by TehipiteTom
Brewer et al. have arrived in Yosemite Valley. Finally, this is the beginning of their first foray into the true High Sierra.