National Parks - Northwest Stories Part 2: Melting Glaciers

Search

National Parks - Northwest Stories Part 2: Melting Glaciers

Part 3 of 3
In 1955, in response to a Harpers Bazaar article about excessive garbage and traffic at the National parks,  Student Conservations Association (SCA) founder Liz Putnam gathered 53 students to volunteer to clean up the National Parks. Today, the SCA has over 4000 volunteers and interns a year.
Also the Digital Storytelling Winner, The Wonderland trail by Perry Allenspach, Adam Soennichsen and Kenny Yang
Part 2 of 2
In the late 1800s, John Huelsdonk headed up the Hoh River to tame the last frontier in America, the interior of the Olympic Peninsula. He received his nickname by carrying a cast iron cook stove from Forks, 27 miles away. The last battle he faced was the Federal government, who wanted to turn his homestead into a National Park; the case went all the way to the Supreme Court. Huelsdonk won  the court case and his family still lives on the land today. Part 1 of 3
Eighty eight percent of the fre
Originally Aired: Sep 25, 2009
Back to Archive

Part 3 of 3 In 1955, in response to a Harpers Bazaar article about excessive garbage and traffic at the National parks, Student Conservations Association (SCA) founder Liz Putnam gathered 53 students to volunteer to clean up the National Parks. Today, the SCA has over 4000 volunteers and interns a year. Also the Digital Storytelling Winner, The Wonderland trail by Perry Allenspach, Adam Soennichsen and Kenny Yang

Northwest Stories Part 2: Melting Glaciers
Part 3 of 3 In 1955, in response to a Harpers Bazaar article about excessive garbage and traffic at the National parks, Student Conservations Association (SCA) founder Liz Putnam gathered 53 students to volunteer to clean up the National Parks. Today, the SCA has over 4000 volunteers and interns a year. Also the Digital Storytelling Winner, The Wonderland trail by Perry Allenspach, Adam Soennichsen and Kenny Yang
embed
Northwest Stories Part 2: Ironman John Huelsdonk
Part 2 of 2 In the late 1800s, John Huelsdonk headed up the Hoh River to tame the last frontier in America, the interior of the Olympic Peninsula. He received his nickname by carrying a cast iron cook stove from Forks, 27 miles away. The last battle he faced was the Federal government, who wanted to turn his homestead into a National Park; the case went all the way to the Supreme Court. Huelsdonk won the court case and his family still lives on the land today.
embed
Northwest Stories Part 2: Liz Putman, founder of Student Conservation Association
Part 1 of 3 Eighty eight percent of the fre
embed

Comments

Post new comment

  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • You can use Markdown syntax to format and style the text. Also see Markdown Extra for tables, footnotes, and more.

More information about formatting options

By submitting this form, you accept the Mollom privacy policy.