The Feathered Hat
Active member
Today's NY Times carries a nice commentary by Lawrence Downes about Thomas Starr King, namesake of the Pliny Range peak near Mt. Waumbek and also of a challenging, Class 5 peak in the Sierra Nevada in California. The occasion of the editorial is the removal, in Statuary Hall in the U.S. Capitol, of a marble statue of Starr King, to be replaced by one of Ronald Reagan. Each state in the union is allowed two statues (California's other one is of Father Junipero Serra), and last year the California legislature voted nearly unanimously to remove Starr King in favor of Reagan.
It seems a shame that hardly anyone remembers Starr King, who was a Unitarian minister, nowadays, and Downes writes the reasons why he should be more widely known than he is. But those of us who love and enjoy White Mountain peaks (and Sierra peaks too) can still remember, if underfoot, this remarkable person who spoke out, when it was exceedingly unpopular to do so, on behalf of slaves, the poor, unionists and the Chinese.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/06/opinion/06sat4.html?th&emc=th
It seems a shame that hardly anyone remembers Starr King, who was a Unitarian minister, nowadays, and Downes writes the reasons why he should be more widely known than he is. But those of us who love and enjoy White Mountain peaks (and Sierra peaks too) can still remember, if underfoot, this remarkable person who spoke out, when it was exceedingly unpopular to do so, on behalf of slaves, the poor, unionists and the Chinese.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/06/opinion/06sat4.html?th&emc=th