the john muir exhibit - people - jeanne carr - influential people in john muir's life - john muir exhibit
Jeanne Carr
1825-1903
- Nature lover, author, and mentor to John Muir
- Jeanne Carr
was an amateur botanist and lover of nature. Her
husband, Dr. Ezra Carr, was one of Muir's professors at the University
of Wisconsin. Dr.Carr later became a professor at University
of California, and California State Superintendent of Public Instruction.
- John Muir left for Madison, Wisconsin, in 1860 to exhibit his inventions
at the Wisconsin State Agricultural Society Fair. Muir and Jeanne Carr
met at the fair, where Carr was greatly impressed by Muir's inventions.
- Jeanne Carr
was Muir's mentor shortly after they met at Madison. They began
correspondence in 1865. Much of their correspondence is recorded
in Letters
from a Friend.
- Jeanne Carr introduced
Muir to many influential people (including Ralph
Waldo Emerson and his future wife Louie
Wanda Strentzel) and sent on his letters to publishers, advancing
Muir's literary career.
- Jeanne Carr went on a camping trip in the Tuolumne Canyon and Sierra
Range with John Muir, Albert Kellogg, and William Keith in 1873.
- Jeanne and her husband later retired to Pasadena, California on an idyllic spot they called "Carmelita" - which was the Carr’s residence and expansive gardens, on land which originated at the NE corner of Colorado & Orange Grove and moved out from there north and east as far as Fair Oaks Blvd. Later the Carr’s would sell off portions their original tract, now known as Carmelita Park with the Norton Simon Museum being its notable feature today. Muir visited the Carrs there, for example, he wrote to Jeanne Carr in a letter written on Aug. 12, 1877:
Dear Mrs. Carr:
I've seen your sunny Pasadena and the patch called yours.
Everything about here pleases me and I felt sorely tempted to take Dr. Congar's advice and invest in an orange patch myself. I feel sure you will be happy here with the Doctor and Allie among so rich a luxuriance of sunny vegetation, How you will dig and dibble in that mellow loam! I cannot think of you standing erect for a single moment, unless it be in looking away out into the dreamy West....
- Among Jeanne Carr's many writings was a contribution "The Heart of
Southern California" in Picturesque
California, Edited by John Muir.