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Original Photograph of Teddy Roosevelt with John Muir

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Political Memorabilia Start Price:1,000.00 USD Estimated At:2,000.00 - 5,000.00 USD
Original Photograph of Teddy Roosevelt with John Muir
SOLD
2,000.00USDto r*******a+ buyer's premium (500.00)
This item SOLD at 2017 Dec 02 @ 09:34UTC-8 : PST/AKDT
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This incredible original photograph was in the William Ashland family for decadess. Ashland worked for the Bonsall paper company in San Francisco and gave the photograph to his new wife, Winifred Woodruff as a wedding gift. They loaned it to the Muir House in Martinez, CA for many years, then it was returned to the family. Photo: 20.5 x 24.5", in original frame, 28.25" x 32.5". Many copies of this photo were made, all with the telegraph poles and lines removed (brushed out) Interesting note: The powerlines in the photo were airbrushed out in the copies distributed by the National Park Service. In an article in "Yosemite" magazine in 1994, "A Camping Trip with Roosevelt and Muir", summer, 1994, the photographer for the Park Service at Yosemite was Julius Theodore Boysen.

Roosevelt and Muir meet: they spent the first night near the Sunset Tree in the Mariposa Grove, the second camp was made near Sentinel Dome following a long hard day's ride through snowdrifts and an afternoon fighting a raging blizzard. President Roosevelt and John Muir Were photographed returning to Yosemite Valley after their private meetings In the Yosemite High Country. This photo was made on the third day, the skies still overcast after the storms. President Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir riding horses along a road in Yosemite Valley, with Half Dome in the distance, accompanied by Park Rangers Archie Leonard and Charles Leidig, followed by unidentified man on foot; left to right, Leonard, Muir, Roosevelt, Leidig. [RL018781] Following behind them are a few of the hundreds of visitors who flocked to Yosemite in order to catch a glimpse of the popular President.

This letter came to William Kent from Roosevelt in 1908:

The White House

Washington January 22, 1908

My dear Mr. Kent:

I have just received from Secretary Garfield your very generous letter enclosing the gift of Redwood Canyon to the National Government to be kept as a perpetual park for the preservation of the giant redwoods therein and to be named the Muir National Monument. You have doubtless seen my proclamation of January 9th, instant, creating this monument. I thank you most heartily for this singularly generous and public spirited action on your part. All Americans who prize the undamaged and especially those who realize the literally unique value of the groves of giant trees, must feel that you have conferred a great and lasting benefit upon the whole country.

I have a very great admiration for John Muir; but after all, my dear sir, this is your gift. No other land than that which you give is included in this tract of nearly 300 acres and I should greatly like to name the monument the Kent Monument if you will permit it.

Sincerely yours, Theodore Roosevelt.

President Theodore Roosevelt used the powers of the Antiquities Act on January 9, 1908, to create Muir Woods National Monument. William Kent, who donated the land for the monument, requested that it be named for noted conservationist John Muir. William Kent: Philanthropist, Politician, Businessman. Until the 1800s, many northern California coastal valleys were covered with coast redwood trees similar to those now found in Muir Woods National Monument. The forest along Redwood Creek in today's Muir Woods was spared from logging because it was hard to get to. Redwood Creek contained one of the Bay Area's last uncut stands of old-growth redwood, Congressman William Kent and his wife, Elizabeth Thacher Kent, bought 611 acres here for $45,000 in 1905. To protect the redwoods the Kents donated 295 of the land to the Federal Government and, in 1908, President Theodore Roosevelt declared it a national monument. Roosevelt suggested naming the area after Kent, but Kent wanted it named for conservationist John Muir. Muir had a lively interest in nature and after brief studies at the University of Wisconsin he left school for what he would call "the University of the Wilderness." On his lengthy wanderings Muir contemplated man's relationship to nature, concluding that all life forms have inherent significance and the right to exist. Humans, Muir decided, are no greater or lesser than other forms of life. Muir eventually won public acceptance of conservation as an environmental ethic and inspired generations of wilderness advocates. (courtesy: ups.gov) Date: 1903 Location: Muir Woods, California HWAC # 54862