Brooklyn Abolitionist Trail

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Brooklyn Abolitionist Trail Unio v n Av A t v e A n o i s n S U 3 o r t t S S n s e o t w S e M t H S n w o 4 t e l S a N Av W on t s S t ri S ar r v t e H t A t 5 S m S i S n i S r t n k o o r o s L n t a r a e l l e H d u t V d i P t S S v M h p A c a y t e c r n K Nostrand Av S a y t M t L s S S e o d w r k e a t z H Warsoff Pl w Sandford St s S y t u r i e t S y e c H a S p e s o w t g n o o d t S d n K a v H Walworth St S e e p l o t A P r a y u e v B e s A R n K e y d t c r o a a Spencer St Spencer Ct R M G v A Av k E e r t e Bedford Av S L a W t g r P S u b g t r s u m b S a v s i l l i m y A a Skillman St i W l c l i n n W i t o t t u S g S t Q e n y q i v u Franklin Av v B e x A o n A e t b d n b Franklin Av L a y S o l o S l i b t t R u a s E h i S t a v e g W i S q t s 9 u B v s t S D n o l r a o S S Kent Av A l i s o v l l s N i b l y s A 70 Willow Street W e Located in the Brooklyn Heights Historic District, this house belonged toa o W a Adrian Van Sinderen, a businessman and a leader in an early anti-slavery l g organization, the BrooklynAmerican ColonizationT Society. TheAfrican- t American abolitionist James Pennington worked for a time at this house R K as Van Sinderen’s coach driver before later becoming a minister. t n i i t v t L Taaffe P A l e h 86 Pierrepont Street S Located in the Brooklyn Heights Historic District, this was the home S t of Lewis Tappan, a prominent leader of the abolitionist movement in Brooklyn and a co-founder of theAmerican Anti-Slavery Society. n s D r s e u e e K l p w e F W t Brooklyn Historical Society q t 128 Pierrepont Street o t B e S S Located in the Brooklyn Heights Historic District and an interior o g landmark, this building has a collection that includes significant original b r S Clas H son A archival materials about abolition in Brooklyn, including slave papers. v u BHS is also a National Parks Service Network to Freedom site. N p b H r s t a m o E a t i l Church of the Pilgrims l e 109 Remsen Street l i e y Located in the Brooklyn Heights Historic District, this church was founded in S W K t 1844 by Henry C. Bowen, a son-in-law of abolitionist Lewis Tappan and himself an important anti-slavery activist in Brooklyn; the congregation’s firstq minister, a Richard Salter Storrs, was an outspoken speaker on abolitionist themes. y B S T e v n Friends Meeting House l n 110 Schermerhorn Street o An individual landmark, this building is associated with the abolitionist A d t P movement through its affiliation with the Quakers,E whom played a emajor rson Pl role in anti-slavery activism in the pre-Civil War era; the building may r t e o have served as part of the Underground Railroad. e o th S R y n l b First Free Congregational Church M 311 Bridge Street v P t W e An individual landmark, this church building was the home of the 0 S African Wesleyan Methodist Church, the oldest black congregation a A S in Brooklyn; the congregation was active in abolitionist activities and e 1 n l assisted fugitive slaves as part of the Underground Railroad in Brooklyn. a n r li r v e P u E t S e A Steuben St J LafayetteAvenue Presbyterian Church G e 102-108 Lafayette Avenue t e Located in the Fort Greene Historic District, this building served as n m h t a station on the Underground Railroad forAfrican Americans fleeing e y q slavery in the South. y o y l t v W B f a C i A f l 3 t a Grand Av e C S l Grand Av Grand Av L t Grand Av 1 r y 1 4 d M R g S n i d v l e W Cambridge Pl A Rye 5 rson St Ryerson St e t t e S S G t 6 v h e A 4 t v k 1 St James Pl u Hall St r A d a o a 7 S t o M d r R l y l S i b m a e s s R A g 8 n Washington Av i d l u 9 a v A P y a K Waverly Av Waverly Av t v Learn more at nyc.gov/landmarks S A d t ea e h k er r Clinton Av m a am v M H A t e S e G h t Vanderbilt Av u o e v A q 8 S B t Clermont Av S 5 v A 7 Adelphi St t S 8 t S Carlton Av 5 Cumberland St Washington Pk Cumberland St Cumberla t nd Wk S 4 t N Oxford W S N Oxford St k y S Oxford St a 9 2 w y t a s 8 a w v t v v E s A e A A W ck v gh o A u e D is o v l rr n A t o Do n N Portland Av r S Portland Av M c to y M ng l i M y r P a r w a t s W e N n r W Elliott Pl u S Elliott Pl Fulton Ferry b Fulton Ferry Landing u Foot of Old Fulton Street t Located in the Fulton Ferry Historic District, this was where “Beecher t Historic District t boats” landed, packed Sunday morning ferries that brought audiences to t S A S hear famed abolitionist Henry Ward Beecher preach at Plymouth Church. S t e S s l 3 e t t t t i W DUMBO Plymouth Church L u 65t Orange Street S S St Edward's St Located in the Brooklyn Heights Historic District, this was the church of St Edward's St Henry Ward Beecher and was considered the “Grand Central Terminal” a Ft Greene Pl 2 S of the Underground Railroad in Brooklyn. The church is also a National v A 4 Parks Service Network to Freedom site. 1 s Historic District t l l s S a a v v A A k 1 n s h o s N d u s H n W r t St Felix St S a y v t a a v N n M E e Ashland Pl m b S k u t E W y e v q 0.4 miles a B n t N o S M t s S t b d l k t R o ockw d W ell P G l S t N e e n l S F n a n y k h S b B E o qe Et Nb W h t v J S H e u dson A e A t v g c n h i v r n q s 1 P u u S A tb o B a o Fl 3 d s l l r i d t t o 2 u S W c t S Ex H r v n i A b S t r sh t t u o b a t e S la S n S F t S C F t 0.4 miles l t t b n o S a t h e e P S t g S d N t s i e r r E d l l n B s e i f f W n e u n u F n D i o e E x v v o r h v E o A e q e sh n F o u a q b N m t B t a t l S J F H d B l y o l G t S S e g d i P r t B y r S a l n l t r S i d l e i f o l f u T 8 D h P l r t l 8 P t e l t t S t S e S a g m m d l i t r P r S l B r t S l r E a S n e e P e d S h o u h t t d p e t c c t a r s a h c S e t g S s o t S e t h T S n s s a t i Pl c k p S a C v e t d n n Brooklyn Heights S i g C S r a r s e c t o L o n n o S h e N r t c o h y v a o y w l J n a A a L Y r g C r u A Historic District i t S a F P c S l i H l t t d S i s n t m n a l d T o A S a P r l B n B t t y a n tt i t nha o A a a H l l r M l t B S a n n o ta t P t g G n a i 9 h h n s a a 1 r M W s B miles 0.4 n s 0 a t t S t a s 2 t h o m S a n .
Recommended publications
  • David Foster Wallace on the Good Life
    10/31/2014Forthcoming in Freedom & Self: The Philosophy of David Foster Wallace 124 6 David Foster Wallace on the Good Life Nathan Ballantyne and Justin Tosi Dostoevsky wrote fiction about the stuff that’s really important. He wrote fiction about identity, moral value, death, will, sexual vs. spiritual love, greed, freedom, obsession, reason, faith, suicide. And he did it without ever reducing his characters to mouthpieces or his books to tracts. His concern was always what it is to be a human being—that is, how to be an actual person, someone whose life is informed by values and principles, instead of just an especially shrewd kind of self-preserving animal. —David Foster Wallace, “Joseph Frank’s Dostoevsky” David Foster Wallace thought that the point of writing fiction was to explore what it is to be a 1 human being. In this essay, we argue that his writings suggest a view about what philosophers would call the good life . Wallace’s perspective is subtle and worthy of attention. We’ll contrast what Wallace says with some popular positions from moral philosophy and contemporary culture. Wallace said much about ethical matters even though he didn’t write on them formally or systematically. How then shall we distill views from his writings? Our strategy is to present Wallace’s reactions, as found in his fiction and some essays, to three positions about the good life. We will ask what Wallace would make of those positions and thus try to triangulate his own view by reference to them. The first position we’ll explore is sometimes called ironism .
    [Show full text]
  • Degrees of Freedom
    February 2015 D of F EXPANDING COLLEGE OPPORTUNITIES for Currently and Formerly Incarcerated Californians Stanford Criminal Justice Center Chief Justice Earl Warren Stanford Law School Institute on Law and Social Policy UC Berkeley School of Law DEGREES OF FREEDOM: Expanding College Opportunities for Currently and Formerly Incarcerated Californians February 2015 A report of the Renewing Communities Initiative Acknowledgements This report was co-written by Debbie Mukamal, Rebecca Silbert, and Rebecca M. Taylor. This report is part of a larger initiative – Renewing Communities – to expand college opportunities for currently and formerly incarcerated students in California. Nicole Lindahl was a contributing author; Nicole Lindahl and Laura Van Tassel also provided research assistance for this report. The research and publication of this report has been supported by the Ford Foundation. The authors thank Douglas Wood of the Ford Foundation for his vision and leadership which catapulted this report. The authors are grateful to the many people who provided information, experience, and guidance in the development of this report. These individuals are listed in Appendix A. Any errors or misstatements in this report are the responsibility of the authors; the recommendations made herein may, or may not, be supported by the individuals listed in Appendix A. Founded in 2005, the Stanford Criminal Justice Center serves as a research and policy institute on issues related to the criminal justice system. Its efforts are geared towards both generating policy research for the public sector, as well as providing pedagogical opportunities to Stanford Law School students with academic or career interests in criminal law and crime policy.
    [Show full text]
  • Civil Rights in Brooklyn Primary Source Packet
    CIVIL RIGHTS IN BROOKLYN PRIMARY SOURCE PACKET Student Name Civil Rights in Brooklyn Primary Source Packet INTRODUCTORY READING Murphy, Brendan. “Civil Rights Professional Development Packet for Teachers.” Brooklyn Collection, Brooklyn Public Library. The Civil Rights Movement in Brooklyn The Civil Rights Movement is typically associated with the Black Freedom Movement from the mid- 1950s through the 1960s. However, the movement started much earlier than that. In the early twentieth century, African Americans organized groups such as the Urban League and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Though these groups were incredibly important, it was the experiences of African American men and women during World War II that reshaped how they viewed their opportunities and rights. The Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and the Black Panthers were among the important civil rights organizations born from that experience. CORE played a major role in transforming what began as a movement for racial equality just in the military into a broader social movement for racial equality. CORE was a national, interracial organization with a commitment to nonviolent direct action, which became a major force in the struggle to end discrimination in the United States from 1942 through the 1960s. While the group raised awareness of civil rights campaigns in the south to end segregation, CORE also made clear that the problem of discrimination was equally a northern problem. Chapters of CORE were established in New York including: Bronx CORE, Harlem CORE, Lower East Side CORE, Queens CORE, and Brooklyn CORE. Ministers from black churches and local Brooklynites also joined the effort.
    [Show full text]
  • Writing the Nation: a Concise Introduction to American Literature
    Writing the Nation A CONCISE INTRODUCTION TO AMERIcaN LITERATURE 1 8 6 5 TO P RESENT Amy Berke, PhD Robert R. Bleil, PhD Jordan Cofer, PhD Doug Davis, PhD Writing the Nation A CONCISE INTRODUCTION TO AMERIcaN LITERATURE 1 8 6 5 TO P RESENT Amy Berke, PhD Robert R. Bleil, PhD Jordan Cofer, PhD Doug Davis, PhD Writing the Nation: A Concise Introduction to American Literature—1865 to Present is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. This license allows you to remix, tweak, and build upon this work, even commercially, as long as you credit this original source for the creation and license the new creation under identical terms. If you reuse this content elsewhere, in order to comply with the attribution requirements of the license please attribute the original source to the University System of Georgia. NOTE: The above copyright license which University System of Georgia uses for their original content does not extend to or include content which was accessed and incorporated, and which is licensed under various other CC Licenses, such as ND licenses. Nor does it extend to or include any Special Permissions which were granted to us by the rightsholders for our use of their content. Image Disclaimer: All images and figures in this book are believed to be (after a reasonable investigation) either public domain or carry a compatible Creative Commons license. If you are the copyright owner of images in this book and you have not authorized the use of your work under these terms, please contact the University of North Georgia Press at [email protected] to have the content removed.
    [Show full text]
  • The Classical Bildungsroman As an Ontological Dimension of the Novel of Counter-Development in England from Jane Austen to Ford Madox Ford (1813–1924)
    City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works All Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects 2-2020 The Remnants of Harmonious Bildungs: The Classical Bildungsroman as an Ontological Dimension of the Novel of Counter-Development in England from Jane Austen to Ford Madox Ford (1813–1924) Anne E. McFadden The Graduate Center, City University of New York How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/3579 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] THE REMNANTS OF HARMONIOUS BILDUNGS: THE CLASSICAL BILDUNSROMAN AS AN ONTOLOGICAL DIMENSION OF THE NOVEL OF COUNTER-DEVELOPMENT IN ENGLAND FROM JANE AUSTEN TO FORD MADOX FORD (1813-1924) By ANNE E. MCFADDEN A dissertation submitted to the graduate faculty in English in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, The City University of New York 2020 ©2020 Anne E. McFadden iii The Remnants of Harmonious Bildungs: The Classical Bildungsroman as an Ontological Dimension of the Novel of Counter-Development in England from Jane Austen to Ford Madox Ford (1813-1924) By Anne E. McFadden This manuscript has been read and accepted for the Graduate Faculty in English in satisfaction of the dissertation requirements for the degree in English ____________________ ___________________________________ Date Chair of Examining Committee ____________________ ____________________________________ Date Executive Officer Supervisory Committee: Richard Kaye Alan Vardy Tanya Agathocleous The City University of New York iv ABSTRACT The Remnants of Harmonious Bildungs: The Classical Bildungsroman as an Ontological Dimension of the Novel of Counter-Development in England from Jane Austen to Ford Madox Ford (1813-1924) By Anne E.
    [Show full text]
  • The Domestic Bildungsroman and the American City, 1830-1900
    Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Doctoral Dissertations Graduate School 2016 Idling Women: The omesD tic Bildungsroman and the American City, 1830-1900 Jordan L. Von Cannon Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations Part of the English Language and Literature Commons Recommended Citation Von Cannon, Jordan L., "Idling Women: The omeD stic Bildungsroman and the American City, 1830-1900" (2016). LSU Doctoral Dissertations. 1677. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/1677 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized graduate school editor of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please [email protected]. IDLING WOMEN: THE DOMESTIC BILDUNGSROMAN AND THE AMERICAN CITY, 1830-1900 A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in The Department of English by Jordan L. Von Cannon B.A., Palm Beach Atlantic University, 2008 M.A., University of Kansas, 2011 August 2016 “When a girl leaves her home at eighteen, she does one of two things. Either she falls into saving hands and becomes better, or she rapidly assumes the cosmopolitan standard of virtue and becomes worse.” “She gazed and gazed, wondering, delighting, longing, and all the while the siren voice of the unrestful was whispering in her ear.” - Theodore Dreiser, Sister Carrie ii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Throughout this dissertation, I have found myself to be an idling woman at various points.
    [Show full text]
  • Pathways to Freedom: Brooklyn Stories of Struggle and Protest
    Prof. Bokor/Campbell/Mutnick English Composition 16C.001, 002, 003 Office: MW 10-11:15; 11:15-12:50* Email: Fall 2011 Office Hours: Room H Pathways to Freedom: Brooklyn Stories of Struggle and Protest Course Description Welcome to English 16C, a composition course that will introduce you to key aspects of academic writing (inquiry, analysis, synthesis, and argument); critical thinking (abstract reasoning, evaluation, thesis development); information literacy and research skills (use of library resources, electronic databases, and MLA-style documentation); and various rhetorical elements and strategies (purpose, audience, voice) that help constitute effective writing. Throughout the course, you will develop reflective writing processes and knowledge of technical aspects of writing such as quoting, paraphrasing, summarizing, citing sources, and crafting good, cohesive sentences. You have opted to register for a special section of English 16, which is part of a learning community called Pathways to Freedom and a larger project sponsored by the Brooklyn Historical Society called Students and Faculty in the Archives (SAFA). In English 16C, you will work with primary sources and archival materials in the BHS library; conduct oral history interviews; and gain digital literacy skills. This fall, you will also be taking History 1 and Orientation Seminar as part of Pathways to Freedom; next spring, you will take Core Seminar 50, History 2, and Coop 1. These courses will be linked and 60 students altogether will participate throughout the year. We hope you will get to know one another, the LIU faculty, and the BHS staff over the next several months and that Pathways to Freedom will be a rich entrée for you into your college career.
    [Show full text]
  • Jonathan Franzen
    Friday, April 29, 2016, 8pm Zellerbach Hall Jonathan Franzen In Conversation with Chancellor Nicholas B. Dirks Cal Performances’ ><=?–><=@ season is sponsored by Wells Fargo. BERKELEY TALKS BERKELEY TALKS is a new series of conversations that brings together international thought leaders, public scholars, creators, and innovators to examine the distinctive issues of our time. These luminaries will engage in dialogue at the sometimes surprising nexus between their area of expertise and the University’s core mission, celebrating the Chancellor’s vision of a vi - brant, engaged, and forward-looking campus culture. When The Corrections was published in 2001, graduated from Swarthmore College in 1981. Jonathan Franzen was probably better known His most recent novel, Purity, was published in for his nonfiction than for his two earlier September 2015 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. novels— The Twenty-Seventh City (1988) and Strong Motion (1992). In an essay he had writ - Nicholas B. Dirks be - ten for Harper’s in 1996, Franzen lamented the came the 10th chancellor declining cultural authority of the American of the University of novel and described his personal search for Cali for nia, Berkeley, on reasons to persist as a fiction writer. “The novel - June 1, 2013. An interna - ist has more and more to say to readers who have tionally renowned histo - less and less time to read,” he wrote.“Where to rian and anthropologist, find the energy to engage with a culture in crisis he is a leader in higher when the crisis consists in the impossibility of education and is well- engaging with the culture?” known for his commitment to and advocacy Five years later, Franzen became fully engaged for accessible, high-quality undergraduate edu - with his culture.
    [Show full text]
  • Middlebrow Modernism: Britten's Operas and the Great Divide
    CHOWRIMOOTOO | MIDDLEBROW MODERNISM Luminos is the Open Access monograph publishing program from UC Press. Luminos provides a framework for preserving and rein- vigorating monograph publishing for the future and increases the reach and visibility of important scholarly work. Titles published in the UC Press Luminos model are published with the same high standards for selection, peer review, production, and marketing as those in our traditional program. www.luminosoa.org The publication of this book was made possible by generous subventions, awards, and grants from the Institute of Scholarship in the Liberal Arts in Notre Dame’s College of Arts and Letters; the University of California Press; and the AMS 75 PAYS Endowment of the American Musicological Society, funded in part by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Middlebrow Modernism CALIFORNIA STUDIES IN 20th-CENTURY MUSIC Richard Taruskin, General Editor 1. Revealing Masks: Exotic Influences and Ritualized Performance in Modernist Music Theater, by W. Anthony Sheppard 2. Russian Opera and the Symbolist Movement, by Simon Morrison 3. German Modernism: Music and the Arts, by Walter Frisch 4. New Music, New Allies: American Experimental Music in West Germany from the Zero Hour to Reunification, by Amy Beal 5. Bartók, Hungary, and the Renewal of Tradition: Case Studies in the Intersection of Modernity and Nationality, by David E. Schneider 6. Classic Chic: Music, Fashion, and Modernism, by Mary E. Davis 7. Music Divided: Bartók’s Legacy in Cold War Culture, by Danielle Fosler-Lussier 8. Jewish Identities: Nationalism, Racism, and Utopianism in Twentieth-Century Art Music, by Klára Móricz 9.
    [Show full text]
  • In a 2005 Commencement Address David Foster
    2 WALLACE, FREE CHOICE, AND FATALISM GILA SHER n a 2005 commencement address David Foster Wal- lace extolled the value of “freedom of choice.” But the i freedom of choice he extolled was not the freedom to do things in the world, change the world, build something new in the world. The choice he talked about, the “real freedom,” “the kind that is most precious,” was the freedom to choose “what to think” (my italics)—the “total freedom of choice regarding what to think about.” It was the freedom of “choosing to ... alter ... or get ... free of [our] natural, hard-wired default setting,” choosing “what you pay attention to and ... how you construct meaning from experi- ence,” the freedom not to follow your “natural default setting ..., the automatic way ... [we] experience ... adult life.” Specically, he said, it is “the boring, frustrating, crowded parts of adult life” “where the work of choosing is gonna come in ..., the trac jams and crowded aisles and long checkout lines” where you need to “make a conscious decision about how to think and what to pay attention to.” “The only thing that’s capital-T True is that you get to decide how you’re gonna try to see” the “petty, frustrating” stu in everyday life (Wallace 2005). © Cahn, Steven M.; Eckert, Maureen, Apr 14, 2015, Freedom and the Self : Essays on Philosophy of David Foster Wallace Columbia University Press, New York, ISBN: 9780231539166 Now, of course, for a novelist to see the world in a new way is (potentially) to change the world. But in his 2005 address Wal- lace focused on how, in order to cope with life, we have to decide 32 | WALLACE, FREE CHOICE, AND FATALISM actively to see it in ways that will not let it crush us.
    [Show full text]
  • Middlebrow Media and the Politics of Contemporary Fiction
    Middlebrow Media and the Politics of Contemporary Fiction Andrew McCann ATE IN 2014, WRITING IN THE LITERATURE PAGES OF THE MELBOURNE AGE, THE CRITIC Jane Sullivan bravely ‘outed’ herself. L This isn’t easy, but it’s time I came clean. I hope you will still respect me once I’ve made my confession. I’m a middlebrow reader. There. I’ve said it. I’m out. And you know what? I’m proud. Stand shoulder to shoulder with me, fellow middlebrows, because we’re changing the literary world. (29) Of course there is an element of frivolousness to this. Sullivan was, after all, merely introducing Beth Driscoll’s book on what Driscoll calls ‘the new literary middlebrow’. But it is hard to ignore the exaggerated character of Sullivan’s investments. In overcoming the crushing social stigma of being a middlebrow reader she also produced a vision of popular agency that asserts itself against aesthetic prejudices and residual notions of cultural capital. The enthusiasm with which she embraces a term that, until fairly recently, was most often used as a derogatory marker of inferior taste points, albeit imprecisely, to a new wave of scholarship that revisits the terrain of the middlebrow, partly in order to renegotiate the relationship between aesthetic value and broader notions of social utility, and partly as a defense of popular reading practices. The synergies between literary culture and the mass media are central to this work. So too is a cautious optimism, or at least an open-mindedness, in regard to the effects of recreational reading, whether it be orchestrated by Oprah Winfrey’s Book Club or the review pages of the broadsheet press (or what is left of it).
    [Show full text]
  • Capturing Prosperity and Environmental Quality
    Environmental Markets vs. Environmental Socialism: Capturing Prosperity and Environmental Quality By Terry L. Anderson, John and Jean DeNault Senior Fellow, Hoover Institution It is hard to date the beginning of environmentalism. It might have started when the Reverend Thomas Malthus in 1798 penned An Essay on the Principle of Population. Therein he postulated that humans would continue to reproduce until the population demands exceed their ability to produce food, after which famine, disease, and pestilence would check population growth in a “Malthusian trap.” His postulate continues to permeate environmental thinking. For example, in the 1970s, the Club of Rome, armed with data and computers, predicted precise years when we would reach the limits of the world’s resources.1 Their predictions of disaster for humankind called for regulations to restrict use and consumption of resources and thereby restrict economic progress. Despite the fact that we have avoided the trap, this pessimism persists, cloaked in romantic views of nature without human beings. Henry David Thoreau’s Walden provided a more romantic or transcendental view from his window and John Muir used wilderness as his environmental pulpit, but both were not sanguine about human beings’ ability to respect and preserve nature. Aldo Leopold’s Sand County Almanac continued the romantic tradition of the nineteenth century, calling for a “land ethic” to encourage resource stewardship.2 Malthus’s ghost set the stage for modern environmental policies, with books such as Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring and Paul Ehrlich’s The Population Bomb.3 Like earlier predictions, the books forecast famine, pestilence, and wild species endangerment if we did not limit population growth and resource use.
    [Show full text]