by LMBSGV on Tue Aug 23, 2011 8:24 pm
I love reading first-hand accounts from prior to say, for a date, 1950. For instance, the old Sierra Club Bulletin had wonderful stories from Theodore Solomons, Bolton Coit Brown, Joseph LeConte, Marion Randall Parsons, and James S. Hutchinson. Everyone may have read John Muir, but I find the perspective of, for example, the Brewer Survey fascinating. As Carne_Del Muerto said, anything prior to the arrival of Europeans would also be fascinating (and probably illuminating) if it exists. Why didn't anyone bother to interview the Miwok and Piute people who had lived there for who knows how long to learn their perspective? I also wish someone would collect the photographs of LeConte, Cedric Wright (Ansel Adams best friend who Adams thought was an excellent photographer even if he wasn't a singular artist in the class of Adams or Edward Weston), and others from that time into a book.