Silent spring revolution John F. Kennedy, Rachel Carson, Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, and the great environmental awakening

Douglas Brinkley

Book - 2022

"Chronicles the rise of environmental activism during the Long Sixties (1960-1973), telling the story of an indomitable generation that saved the natural world under the leadership of John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, and Richard Nixon"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York, NY : Harper, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Douglas Brinkley (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xxx, 857 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 807-819) and index.
ISBN
9780063212916
  • Preface
  • Part I. Protoenvironmentalists (1945-1959)
  • Chapter 1. The Ebb and Flow of John F. Kennedy
  • Chapter 2. Harry Truman: Polluted and Radiated America
  • Chapter 3. Rachel Carson and the Shore of the Sea
  • Chapter 4. William O. Douglas and the Protoenvironmentalists
  • Chapter 5. Wilderness Politics, Dinosaur National Monument, and the Nature Conservancy
  • Chapter 6. Saving Shorelines
  • Chapter 7. Protesting Plastics, Nuclear Testing, and DDT
  • Part II. John F. Kennedy's New Frontier (1961-1963)
  • Chapter 8. Forging the New Frontier: Stewart Udall and Lyndon Johnson
  • Chapter 9. Wallace Stegner's "Wilderness Letter"
  • Chapter 10. The Green Face of America
  • Chapter 11. Rachel Carson, the Laurance Rockefeller Report, and Kennedy's Science Curve
  • Chapter 12. The White House Conservation Conference (May 24-25, 1962)
  • Chapter 13. Rachel Carson's Alarm
  • Chapter 14. Point Reyes (California) and Padre Island (Texas) National Seashores
  • Chapter 15. Campaigns to Save the Hudson River and Bodega Bay
  • Chapter 16. The Tag Team of John F. Kennedy, Stewart Udall, and Rachel Carson
  • Chapter 17. The Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty
  • Part III. The Environmentalism of Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon (1964-1973)
  • Chapter 18. JFK's Last Conservation Journey
  • Chapter 19. The Mississippi Fish Kill, the Clean Air Act, and American Beautification
  • Chapter 20. The Great Society: Rachel Carson and Howard Zahniser's Legacies
  • Chapter 21. The Wilderness Act of 1964
  • Chapter 22. Ending the Bulldozing of America
  • Chapter 23. America's Natural Heritage: Cape Lookout, Big Bend, the Grand Canyon
  • Chapter 24. Defenders: Historical Preservation, Endangered Species, and Bedroll Scientists
  • Chapter 25. "Sue the Bastards!" and Environmental Justice
  • Chapter 26. The Unraveling of America, 1968
  • Chapter 27. Lyndon Johnson: Champion of Wild Rivers and National Scenic Trails (October 2, 1968)
  • Chapter 28. Taking Stock of New Conservation Wins
  • Chapter 29. Santa Barbara, the Cuyahoga River, and the National Environmental Policy Act
  • Chapter 30. Generation Earth Day, 1970-1971
  • Chapter 31. Nixon's Environmental Activism of 1972: The Great Lakes Protection, the DDT Ban, and the Stockholm Conference
  • Epilogue Last Leaves on the Tree
  • Acknowledgments
  • Appendix I. National Wildlife Refuges
  • Appendix II. National Parks
  • Appendix III. Protection for Animals Initial Endangered Species List 1966-1967
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Image Credits
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Brinkley raises a fourth peak in his mountain range of books chronicling the history of ecological protection in America. In this assiduously detailed yet flowing narrative of people, places, passions, and politics, he chronicles the evolution from conservation to environmentalism during the Long Sixties (1960 -1973) catalyzed by the anti-nukes movement, Rachel Carson's Silent Spring, and the shocking realization that humanity has the capability to destroy life on earth. Brinkley profiles an array of intriguing individuals key to the defense of wilderness, wildlife, air, and water throughout the Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon administrations, including fresh perspectives on each president. Other key figures include Carson, secretary of the interior Stewart Udall, Supreme Court justice and eco-champion William O. Douglas, and Sierra Club executive director David Brower, while Brinkley also spotlights the often overlooked environmental insights and actions of Martin Luther King Jr., Coretta Scott King, Lady Bird Johnson, and Cesar Chavez. While LBJ's substantive advances in environmental stewardship were obscured by the horrors of the Vietnam War, Nixon's resounding environmental successes, including the creation of the Environmental Protection Agency, were steered, surprisingly and enthusiastically, by John Erlichman and cunningly executed primarily for political ends. Rich in facts, anecdotes, and analysis, Brinkley's comprehensive and vivid history of crucial environmental battles and advances is profoundly enlightening as we struggle to conceive of a similarly constructive way forward in a time of worsening climate crisis and political gridlock.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Prominent, best-selling historian Brinkley is a magnet for readers and the scope and importance of this volume are mighty.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Brinkley continues his cycles of histories in which presidents engage with the environment. The great presidential conservationist, of course, was Theodore Roosevelt, subject of Brinkley's The Wilderness Warrior. Rightful Heritage chronicled "FDR's enthusiasm for preserving treasured landscapes in every state." Here, the author charts the transformation of conservation into environmentalism, a change of understanding and emphasis that, in his view, owes disproportionately to popular books by Rachel Carson. Silent Spring inspired a campaign to reduce the use of the toxic pesticides that were entering the food chain and killing birds by the millions, and Carson's works were favorites in the Kennedy White House. As Brinkley relates, when Lyndon Johnson came into office, he took action a step further. While his disastrous policies in Vietnam dragged his Great Society program down, Johnson got some important things done, drawing on the talents of environmental researchers who "were elevated as indispensable first responders rushing to save nothing less than the future of the United States." Considering the Great Society a "bookend" of FDR's New Deal, Brinkley also documents the considerable resistance to these environmental reforms on the part of industry, so that, when Richard Nixon arrived in the White House, he had to balance two opposing impulses: to let business and its right-wing think tanks have their way or to push through environmental legislation. He allowed the Environmental Protection Agency to come into being while cautioning its director that environmentalists were "a bunch of commie pinko queers." Despite his many failures, Nixon got things done, too. (Who knew that he had "a soft spot in his heart for whales"?) Still, as this readable but overlong history documents, it was Carson who merits most of the credit, along with her Kennedy/Johnson Cabinet member Stuart Udall, "the most successful interior secretary in American history." A solid addition to the literature at the intersection of environmentalism and politics. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.