Front cover image for A river running west :the life of John Wesley Powell

A river running west :the life of John Wesley Powell

Intrepid explorer, careful scientist, talented writer, and dedicated conservationist, Powell led the expedition that put the Colorado River on American maps and revealed the Grand Canyon to the world. In A River Running West, Donald Worster tells the story of Powell's great adventures and describes his historical significance. Worster paints a vivid portrait of how this man emerged from the early nineteenth-century world of immigrants, fervent religion, and rough-and-tumble rural culture, and barely survived the Civil War battle at Shiloh. The heart of Worster's biography is Powell's epic journey down the Colorado in 1869, a tale of harrowing experiences, lethal accidents, and breathtaking discoveries. After years in the region collecting rocks and fossils and learning to speak the local Native American languages, Powell returned to Washington as an eloquent advocate for the West, one of America's first and most influential conservationists. But in the end, he fell victim to a clique of Western politicians who pushed for unfettered economic development, relegating the aging explorer to a quiet life of anthropological contemplation
Print Book, English, 2001
Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2001
Biographies
xiii, 673 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
9780195099911, 9781423760740, 9780195156355, 0195099915, 1423760743, 0195156358
1000412626
A mission to America
Rising on the prairie
The hornets' nest of war
Westward the naturalist
Down the great unknown
Surveying the high plateaus
Kapurats
The sublimest thing on earth
Democracy encounters the desert
Myths and maps
Redeeming the earth
The problem of the West
Journey's end