Yosemite John Muir
Squirrel and John Muir
Floy Hutchings lived in Yosemite all her life, and was a tomboy as a little girl, earning her the nickname Squirrel.
Tending the Wild
John Muir was an early proponent of a view we still hold today - that much of California was pristine, untouched wilderness before the arrival of Europeans.
To Yosemite and Beyond
When John Muir died in 1914, the preeminent American naturalist, explorer, and conservationist had not yet written the second volume of his autobiography, in which he planned to cover his Yosemite years.
Yosemite
In the spring of 1869, John Muir was looking for means of support to fund his explorations of California’s Central Valley region. A ranch owner offered him a job herding sheep in the Sierra Nevada.
The Story of Yosemite
Featuring two programs: The Poet & the Rough Rider: In the spring of 1903, President Theodore Roosevelt and poet John Muir spent...






