the john muir exhibit - geography - indiana - marker annotation
Marker Annotation - John Muir In Indianapolis
State Historical Marker References
by Indiana Historical Bureau
Marker Text
Born 1838
in Dunbar, Scotland,1 Muir moved to the U.S.
with his family, settling in Wisconsin 1849.2 As
a youth, he became interested in nature3 and
mechanical inventions.4 He attended
the University of Wisconsin5 and
was consumed with an interest in botany.6 In
1866, he came to Indianapolis7 and worked at a
carriage materials factory located here.8
Following
a severe eye injury,9 Muir left Indianapolis September 186710 to
begin extensive travels, which ended in California March 1868.11
His deep friendship with Catharine Merrill12 and others, however,
resulted in a lifelong connection with Indianapolis.13 Muir co-founded the Sierra Club 1892 and was president until he died December 24, 1914.14
Annotations
1. Chronology of the Life and
Legacy of John Muir (accessed June
19, 2003).
2. Chronology Sierra Club Web site. William Frederic
Badè, The Life and Letters
of John Muir, 2 vols. (Boston, 1923, 1924;
vols. 9 and 10 of The Writings of John Muir, Sierra Edition), 1:36-38.
3. John Muir, The
Story of My Boyhood and Youth (included in The
Writings of John Muir, 10 vols., Sierra Edition, Boston, 1917-1924),
1:3.
4. Muir, The
Story of My Boyhood and Youth, 1:198, 201, 204-6.
5. Muir apparently attended the University for about
two and one half years, although Muir says he attended for four years.
Muir, The Story of My Boyhood and Youth, 1:218-20; Chronology,
Sierra Club Web site. In 1864, Muir had traveled to Canada and remained
for two years until February 22, 1866 when the factory in Meaford,
Ontario where he was working burned down. Chronology,
Sierra Club Web site. In September, 1860, Muir had left home taking
his inventions, two large clocks and a thermometer, to the State Fair
in Madison, Wisconsin. Badè, Life
and Letters, 1:77-79; Muir,
The Story of My Boyhood and Youth, 1:214-15.
6. Muir, The
Story of My Boyhood and Youth, 1: 223-225.
7.
Badè, Life and Letters, 1:152; Chronology,
Sierra Club Web site. In an autobiographical narrative, Muir noted, "Looking over the map I saw that Indianapolis was an important
railroad center and probably had manufactories of different sorts in
which I could find employment, with the advantage of being in the heart
of one of the very richest forest of deciduous hard wood trees on the
continent." In Badè, Life
and Letters, 1:153. Muir boarded
at 331 South Pennsylvania and was listed as a sawyer. Edward's Annual
Directory of the Inhabitants in the City of Indianapolis, 1867
(Indianapolis, 1866), 327.
8. Muir indicated that he worked at a carriage materials
factory in Indianapolis. In Badè, 1:153. On April 6, [1867],
he requests that letters to him be sent to Osgood, Smith & Co.
Muir, Letters to
a Friend Written to Mrs. Ezra S. Carr, 1866-1879 (Dunwoody,
Ga., 1973), 16, 19. Osgood, Smith & Co., a hub and spoke manufacturer,
was located at 230 South Illinois. Edwards Annual Directory in
the City of Indianapolis in the City of Indianapolis for 1867 (Indianapolis,
1866), 335. In the mid-1860s J. R. Osgood and S.E. Smith established
a business, which produced wagon and carriage materials on South Illinois
Street. In 1870, with Jacob Woodburn of St. Louis, they incorporated
the Woodburn Sarven Wheel Company. It became the largest manufacturer
of the patented "Sarven Wheel" in the United States during
the late nineteenth century. David J. Bodenhamer and Robert G. Barrows,
eds. The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis (Bloomington & Indianapolis,
1994), 1451. Muir later noted, "I greatly enjoyed this mechanical
work, began to invent and introduce labor-saving improvements and was
so successful that my botanical and geological studies were in danger
of being seriously interrupted." Muir's employers had suggested
a possible partnership in the business to which he replied ".
. . that although I liked the inventive work and the earnest rush and
roar and whirl of the factory, Nature's attractions were stronger and
I must soon get away.' In Badè,
1:153-54.
9. The exact date of the eye injury is not known.
Muir wrote that "While at work in a mill my right eye was pierced by
a file, and then came the darkest time of my life." John Muir, "Words
from an Old Friend," in
The Man Shakespeare And Other Essays With Impressions and Reminiscences
of the Author by Melville B. Anderson, and With Some Words of Appreciation
from John Muir, by Catharine Merrill (Indianapolis, 1902), 33.
Muir elsewhere describes exactly what he was doing when the injury
occurs. Muir, in Badè, 1:154. In an April 6, 1867 letter, he
notes, "The
eye is pierced just where the cornea meets the sclerotic coating. .
. . Sight was completely gone from the injured eye for the first few
days . . . but I was surprised to find that on the fourth or fifth
day I could see a little with it. Sight continued to increase for a
few days. . . . I can see sufficiently well with it to avoid the
furniture, etc., in walking through a room. Can almost, in full light,
recognize some of my friends but cannot distinguish one letter from
another of common type." Muir, Letters
to a Friend, 17-18.
His good friend Catharine Merrill took charge of his eye injury and
employed the best oculist in Indianapolis. Samuel Merrill, "Personal
Recollections of John Muir," Sierra Club Bulletin, 13:1 (February,
1928), 25.
10. He left September 1, 1867 on the thousand-mile
walk to the Gulf of Mexico. John Muir, A
Thousand-Mile Walk to the Gulf (included in
The Writings of John Muir, Sierra Edition), 1:247. In a June 9, 1867
letter, Muir indicates that he plans to leave Indianapolis with Merrill
Moores (the 11 year old nephew of Catharine Merrill) to botanize, in
Decatur, Illinois and then north to Madison, Wisconsin. Muir, Letters
to a Friend, 24-25. In August 1867, Muir returned to Indianapolis.
Muir, ibid., 31.
11. Muir sailed March 6, 1868 from
New York City to Panama and from there to San Francisco where he arrived
March 27. Badè, 1:174-77; Muir,
A
Thousand-Mile Walk, 396, indicates "We reached San
Francisco about the first of April."
12. "Miss Merrill was the
first friend I found in Indiana, and one of the kindest, wisest, and
most helpful of my life. . . . . I was blind for months. . . . She.
. . . procured the services of the best oculist and the children she
knew I loved. And when at last after long months of kindness and skill
she [Catharine Merrill] saw me out in Heaven's sunshine again,
. . . her joy was as great as my own." Muir, "Words from
an Old Friend," 32-33; Samuel Merrill, "Personal Recollections," 25.
Catharine Merrill, born 1824, was the daughter of State Treasurer,
Samuel Merrill. She taught school in the back parlor of her home (57),
was a nurse in the Civil War (306, 307), wrote The Indiana Soldier
in the War of the Union (323), and was a professor at North Western
Christian University (338). She was the aunt of Merrill Moores, who
accompanied John Muir on some of his excursions (343, 344, 354). Katharine
Merrill Graydon, collected and arranged, Catharine Merrill, Life
and Letters (Greenfield, Ind.), 1934.
13. There are communications to, from, and about
Muir in Graydon, Catharine Merrill. One letter July 2, 1896 indicates
that Muir visited with Catharine during a trip to Indianapolis. Badè
discovered that Muir had left some of his belongings at the home of
Julia M. Moores went he left Indianapolis on his thousand-mile walk.
Badè traced the belongings to Moores' son's home in Indianapolis
and found Muir's herbarium gathered 1864-1867, which gave important
clues to Muir's travels 1864-1867. Badè, 1:117... On February
5, 1880, Muir writes to Katharine Merrill Graydon: "I mean to
come see you all in a year or two . . . to see you all in your new
developments. The sweet underbrush of girls - Moores, Merrills,
Graydons, etc. - was very refreshing and pleasant to me all my
Indiana days. . . . Going to Indianapolis is one of the brightest of
my hopes. It seems but yesterday since I left you all. . . . I will
be so happy to see you again, not to renew my acquaintance, for that
has not been for a moment interrupted but to know you better in your
new growth." Badè, 2:128. There are additional letters quoted
in Badè, 2.
14. Chronology, Sierra Club Web site.
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