|
CARSON, RACHEL LOUISE (1907-1964)
biologist, environmentalist, and nature writer was born
in Springdale, Pennsylvania, near Pittsburgh, on May 27, 1907. From the
mid-1940s, she and her mother spent summers near West Southport, and in
1952 Carson built a summer cottage along the Sheepscot River.
As a child, Carson was interested in nature and,
after majoring in biology at what is now Chatham College in Pittsburgh,
she graduated magna cum laude in 1928. She received her M.A. in 1932 in
marine zoology from Johns Hopkins, taught for a few years, then joined
what became the U. S. Fish & Wildlife Service in Washington, D.C.
The Baltimore Sun published a series of her
articles on the sea and her first major publication, an article entitled
"Undersea," was published in the Atlantic Monthly in September 1937.
After working on fisheries issues during World War II, Carson served as
editor-in-chief of the Fish and Wildlife Service's publications from 1949
to 1952. She was awarded the Distinguished Service Award by the Department
of the Interior.
Carson's first book, Under the Sea Wind attracted
little notice when published in 1941. But her second book, The Sea Around
Us (1951), was a best-seller for 86 weeks and has been translated into
thirty languages. The book, originally serialized as "A Profile of the
Sea," received the National Book Award in 1952, among many others.
Silent Spring (1962), her fourth book, first
serialized in The New Yorker, immediately drew the wrath of the
chemical industry. Carson was accused of being a Communist by Velsicol
Chemical Company, which threatened to sue her publisher. The
New York
Times review, titled "There's Poison All Around Us Now," appeared on
September 23, 1962. The controversy around the book -- which warned the
public of the hazards of pesticide misuse and abuse -- led to
a federal investigation into the misuse of pesticides and in lengthy Congressional
hearings in 1963.
According to Maine's
Claim to Fame,
In 1958, Rachel received a
letter from friends Smart and Olga Huckins of Duxbury, Massachusetts, whose
small nature sanctuary had been devastated by air spraying of DDT, virtually
wiping out all birds and beneficial insect life. Shouldn't something be done
about it? Something should, said Rachel Carson, who set about gathering
material for a brief article.
Instead, that brief article
became Silent Spring (1962), a book that hit the government, the
public, and the powerful chemical companies, said the New York Times, "like
the Biblical Plague of locusts."
Four and a half years in the
writing, backed by 55 pages of sources, Silent Spring declared
simply that carelessly used pesticides were poisoning the earth.
"Chemicals are the sinister and unrecognized partners of radiation in
changing the very nature of the world--the very nature of life," she
wrote. "Can anyone believe it possible to lay down such a barrage of
poison on the surface of the earth without making it unfit for all life? They
should not be called pesticides but biocides."
Instantly, the chemical
industry struck back with the fury of a storm at sea. Unable to match her
prose, they attacked her personally: "Gross distortions of actual facts,
completely unsupported by science, and absolutely absurd," claimed one
company chemist. 'The real threat is not pesticides but hordes of
insects," charged another. "And Miss Carson is a writer, not a real
scientist at all."
But the public outcry could not be ignored. In
1962, from town meetings in Maine to the United States Congress, from Time
Magazine to President Kennedy's press conferences, people discussed and
debated Rachel Carson and Silent Spring. CBS television devoted a
"Special Report" to Silent Spring that was one of the
most-watched programs of the decade. Even the comic strip "Peanuts"
took up the cause.
In the early 1950's, Carson became friends with Dorothy
Murdoch Freeman (1898-1978), an administrator for the Massachusetts Department
of Agricultural Services. Carson's Maine home was built near the Freeman's.
The two exchanged many letters over a twelve-year period, some of which
are now published as Always, Rachel: The Letters of Rachel Carson and Dorothy
Freeman, 1952-1964 (1995; edited by Dorothy Freeman's daughter, Martha
Freeman). Bates College has a collection of 543 of these letters.
Carson died on April 14, 1964 in Silver Spring, Maryland,
of breast cancer that had been diagnosed in 1960. The Rachel Carson National
Wildlife Refuge in Wells -- a 4,600-acre refuge that stretches from Kittery
to Cape Elizabeth -- was dedicated in June 1964. The refuge consists primarily
of coastal salt marsh with habitat for more than 250 bird and mammal species.
The Rachel Carson Salt Pond Preserve
in New Harbor (a village in the town of Bristol) is a popular
salt pond and tidal pool area along Route 32 where she came to observe
the diverse marine life.
In 1980, Carson was posthumously awarded the highest
civilian honor in the U.S., the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
(Adapted from the Waterboro Public
Library Website at
http://www.waterboro.lib.me.us/maineaut/c.htm#carson)
Additional resources
Lear, Linda. Rachel Carson: Witness
for Nature. 1997. considered the definitive biography.
Lear, Linda. Ed. Lost Woods: The
Discovered Writing of Rachel Carson. 1998. with introduction by Linda
Lear
Waddell, Craig. Ed. And No Birds
Sing. Rhetorical Analyses of Rachel Carson's Silent Spring. 2000.
Brooks, Paul. Rachel Carson: The
Writer at Work 1972/1998.
Harlan, Judith. Sounding
The Alarm. 1989.
Reef, Catherine. Rachel Carson:
The Wonder of Nature. 1992. Earth Keepers series.
Wadsworth, Ginger. Rachel
Carson: Voice for the Earth. 1992. |