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Cedar Key, Florida

Historical Marker


John Muir in Florida Historical Marker - Front - Cedar Key Florida John Muir in Florida Historical Marker - Back - Cedar Key Florida

Photos © Bob Brooks, used by permission.
(Click on an image for 800 x 600 version)

Front Text reads:

JOHN MUIR AT CEDAR KEY

John Muir, noted naturalist and conservation leader, spent several months in Florida in 1867. He arrived at Cedar Key in October, seven weeks after setting out from Indiana on a "thousand-mile walk to the Gulf." Muir's journal account of the adventure, which was published in 1916, two years after his death, includes interesting glimpses of the quality of life in the post- Civil War South. "The traces of war," he wrote, "are not only apparent on the broken fields, mills and woods ruthlessly slaughtered, but also on the countenances of the people." Florida deeply impressed the twenty-nine year old Muir.

Back Text reads:

He remembered the "watery and vide-tied" land where "the streams are still young" which he had seen and sampled on his way from Fernandina. It was while recovering from a bout with malaria in Cedar Key that Muir first expressed his belief that nature was valuable for its own sake, not only because it was useful for man. This principle guided John Muir throughout his life. In early 1868, he left Cedar key and eventually settled in California, where he helped establish the Yosemite National Park and, in 1892, the Sierra Club, which became one of our nation's best known environmental organizations.

Sponsored by Florida Chapter of the Sierra Club in cooperation with Department of State.


See also John Muir's chapters in his book A Thousand Mile Walk to the Gulf :


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John Muir in Florida
Places Important to John Muir


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