Char Miller
Trinity University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Char Miller.
Rangelands | 2005
Char Miller
Crisis management: challenge and controversy in Forest Service history. DOI:10.2458/azu_rangelands_v27i3_miller
The Journal of American History | 2000
Char Miller
One of the enduring narrative tensions that animates much of American environmental historiography is the conflict between those who argue for the preservation of natural spaces and those who call for their conservation-and use. Made to stand as champions of these two apparently irreconcilable ideological positions are John Muir, one of the founders and first president of the Sierra Club, and Gifford Pinchot, who helped establish the Forest Service of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) and served as its first chief. The older Muir initially befriended the younger Pinchot; they met in June 1893 in the New York City home of James and Mary Eno Pinchot, when Muir was fifty-five and Pinchot was thirty-one. Thereafter they maintained a lively correspondence, and when possible they hiked and camped amid some of the Wests most spectacular landscapes. Their amiable relationship allegedly soured in the late 1890s due to sharpening differences in their perspectives on the human place in nature. These differences came to outweigh the benefits they had derived from their excursions into the wild. 1 No moment seems to have captured this rupture more vividly than an apparently heated exchange between the two men in the lobby of Seattles Rainier Grand Hotel, sometime early in September 1897. Please note the qualifiers in the preceding sentence. Although many historians have recounted the incident in some detail and believe it signaled an irreparable breach in the mens personal relationship, and consequently in the two wings of the political movement with which they are so strongly identified, there is no incontrovertible evidence that it ever happened. I did not know that when I began work on a biography of Pinchot, in the pages of which-I must confess-I had expected to renarrate this tale because of its inherent drama and symbolic importance. It was only after I had read through the various secondary accounts that I noticed some small discrepancies that then forced me to sift through the relevant primary sources, research that could not confirm the substance of the story as it has been told.
Environmental History Review | 1992
Char Miller
Environmental History | 2007
Renata Marson Teixeira de Andrade-Downs; William Beinart; Michael Bess; Lisa M. Brady; Tom Brooking; Kathleen A. Brosnan; Jane Carruthers; Craig E. Colten; Gregory T. Cushman; Finis Dunaway; Marcus Hall; J. Donald Hughes; Linda L. Ivey; Darin Kinsey; James G. Lewis; Scott B. MacDonald; Jennifer Adams Martin; Cynthia Melendy; Lisa Mighetto; Char Miller; Gregg Mitman; Kathryn Morse; Eric Pawson; Kenneth Pomeranz; Stephen J. Pyne; Harriet Ritvo; Adam Rome; Christine Meisner Rosen; David Rosner; Timothy Silver
Environmental History | 2003
Char Miller
The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era | 2006
Char Miller
The American Historical Review | 2005
Char Miller
Pacific Historical Review | 2005
Char Miller
Journal of Forestry | 2005
Char Miller
Journal of Forestry | 2005
Char Miller