In this book Stewart Udall, Secretary of the Interior from 1961-1969,
details the history of great Americans who advocated for conservation
and preservation of the USA's great outdoors. A passionate and
idealistic politician, Udall entered office with an immense knowledge of
the environmental challenges facing the United States. The massive
economic growth of the postwar boom, the construction of immense
infrastructures such as the interstate highway system, and the emergence
of urban sprawl as a problem confronting several states - though these
brought prosperity, they also carried great perils of irreversible
environmental destruction. This work establishes that concerns about
human proliferation on America's lands are not new: they can be traced
back to the dawn of the American nation. The tribespeople of the Native
Americans were the first to show respect for nature, with authors such
as Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau advocating for greater
care to be taken.