Murder of a Landscape: The California Farmer-Smelter War, 1897-1916 (Western Lands and Waters) Review
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(More customer reviews)MURDER OF A LANDSCAPE: THE CALIFORNIA FARMER-SMELTER WAR, 1897-1916 tells how air pollution from a local smelter plant severely damaged crops and timber in a remote California locale, devastating a core area of 200 square miles and creating the nation's largest man-made desert. The development of this environmental catastrophe and the struggles that ensued between farmers and government makes for an absorbing local survey of the copper industry and the farmers who tried to shut down the smelters. Any California history library - and many an environmental collection - must have this!
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Between 1896 and 1919, air pollution from large-scale copper smelting in northern California's Shasta County severely damaged crops and timber in a 1,000-square-mile region, completely devastating a core area of 200 square miles. The poisons from these smelters created the nation's largest man-made desert—a shocking contrast to the beauty of the surrounding Cascades and Trinity Alps.
This book traces the development of that environmental catastrophe and explains a long, complex, and rancorous struggle that involved several corporations, hundreds of farmers and ranchers, and all levels of government. In tackling this long-neglected story—one hardly known within or beyond California—Khaled J. Bloom takes readers back to the region of that time and shows how the copper industry posed serious environmental threats from the beginning. He tells of hardscrabble settlers and gentleman farmers who rose up repeatedly in unsuccessful efforts to either clean up or shut down the smelters.
What appears today as an environmental cause was really a struggle to save individual property and a way of life. Yet, as Bloom shows, the farmers never had a chance against wider public opinion and the many financial interests that benefited from copper production. Profit and power won out, and posterity was left with a mess. California still contends with the toxic legacy.
Murder of a Landscape tells the long-overlooked story of California's short-lived copper boom, presenting an interesting cross-section of society and attitudes in rural California during the Progressive Era. Offering the drama and pathos of a David-and-Goliath tale in which Goliath wins and strides on, the book makes compelling reading for anyone interested in the industrial, political, and environmental history of the American West.
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