Duluth, Minnesota - September 13, 2005
Above all else, the late Gaylord
Nelson will
be remembered as the founder of Earth Day. Yet for those who love Lake
Superior, the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore will always be a major
part of his legacy.
Thus, for creation of both a gift to our region and a broader
awareness of good stewardship for all such gifts, it is an honor to
announce the 2005 Lake Superior Magazine Achievement Award for the former U.S. senator and Wisconsin governor.
The Achievement Award, revealed annually in the October/November issue of Lake Superior, is
given to a person or organization that has improved the well-being of
Lake Superior and its residents. The editors had chosen Gaylord Nelson earlier
in the year and were, with others, greatly saddened by his death July
3, 2005.
Gaylord Nelson was an easy choice. Earth Day in 1970 was
pivotal in changing attitudes and bringing the fledgling environmental
movement into the mainstream.
As for the Apostles, Nelson pushed hard in the 1960s to
create the lakeshore. It was approved in 1970. Now roughly 80 percent
of the Apostle Islands (33,500 acres) is designated as the Gaylord
Nelson Wilderness.
At a memorial, the lakeshore’s superintendent, Bob
Krumenaker, described Nelson’s last visit to the Apostles two years ago
during a film shoot. “We walked the beach at Stockton Island and sat on
the dock together while the cameras rolled. The filmmakers encouraged
him to wax eloquent on the meaning of the park to the American people -
it was, literally, a made-for-posterity moment and a chance for him to
paint a verbal picture of how much it meant to him.... But he would
have none of it! He simply said the place speaks for itself; there was
nothing more he could add. His lack of words - he felt no need to claim
credit - was perhaps more eloquent than anything he might have said.”
Nelson’s innovative ideas emerged while he was Wisconsin’s
governor. In 1961, he created the Outdoor Recreation Acquisition
Program using a 1-cent-per-pack tax on cigarettes to acquire thousands
of acres for park land and wildlife habitat. As a U.S. senator, he
helped to sponsor the Wilderness Act of 1964, protecting millions of
acres of federal land. He authored laws to preserve the nation’s wild
and scenic rivers, such as the St. Croix, Wolf and Namekagon, on which
he had canoed as a boy.
The influence of Gaylord Nelson and Earth Day rippled through
the 1970s with creation of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and
passage of 28 major environmental laws. His success may be explained in
part by his affable personality that respected other opinions.
Martin Hanson, who lives south of Ashland, is a member of the
Friends of the Apostle Islands. He said of his longtime friend, “He had
a big circle of friends. Gaylord was very popular in Congress. He had
many friends on both sides of the aisle. He was just a lot of fun, a
cordial person who respected the other person’s viewpoint for what it
was.”
Nelson’s legacy extends to his influence on others. His
daughter Tia Nelson, executive secretary of the Board of Commissioners
of Public Lands for Wisconsin, says, “For as long as I can recall, Papa
has spoken about how the stewardship of our natural resources will be
the determining factor in the quality of life for this and future
generations. And I don’t ever remember not thinking that this would be
my (career direction).”
Bill Bechtel, a friend who worked as Nelson’s staff director
in Washington, says that even in failing health, Nelson wanted to
encourage action. “Right up to the very end, I was working with him. He
wanted to put out a statement” opposing diversion of Lake Superior
water.
Editor Konnie LeMay writes, “Thank you, Gaylord Nelson, for showing us how to work
together to achieve protection of the environment. Because of your
passionate leadership, national treasures like the Apostle Islands and
Lake Superior will be healthier and better protected for generations to
come.”
The award is announced in the current issue of Lake Superior Magazine,
a
full-color consumer publication issued six times a year in Duluth, Minnesota.
The magazine is available by subscription, at newsstands and from the publisher's
office at 325 Lake Avenue South #600, Duluth, Minnesota 55802. For
more information, call 888-BIG LAKE (888-244-5253). www.lakesuperior.com.
Past Award Winners
2004 The Nature Conservancy
2003 Davis Helberg, Retired Executive Director, Duluth Seaway Port Authority
2002 Elmer Engman, Diver, Founder of “Gales of November”
2001 Grand Portage Band of Lake Superior Chippewa
2000 Crisp Point Light Historical Society
1999 C. Patrick Labadie, Historian
1998 John and Ann Mahan, Authors/Publishers
1997 North of Superior Marina Marketing Association
1996 Cities of Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan & Ontario
1995 Lake Superior Binational Forum
1994 Craig Blacklock, photographer
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