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Marjory Stoneman Douglas
Week of December 11, 2000
This
week President Clinton signed the $8 billion Everglades Restoration
Act into law. That made it appropriate for Wellesley College to
remember Marjory Stoneman Douglas '12, who spearheaded the effort
to save the "River of Grass."
Douglas received many awards and tributes for her work. We draw
special attention to two. In 1977 she received a Wellesley College
Alumnae Achievement Award. And in 1993, at the age of 103, she was
awarded a Presidential
Medal of Freedom. Its citation said, "An extraordinary woman
who has devoted her long life to protecting the fragile ecosystem
of the Everglades, and to the cause of equal rights for all Americans,
Marjory Stoneman Douglas personifies passionate commitment. Her
crusade to preserve and restore the Everglades has enhanced our
Nation's respect for our precious environment, reminding all of
us of nature's delicate balance. Grateful Americans honor the "Grandmother
of the Glades" by following her splendid example in safeguarding
America's beauty and splendor for generations to come." Mrs. Douglas
donated her Medal to Freedom to Wellesley College.
Douglas was born in 1890 in Minneapolis. After her parents separated,
Marjory and her mother lived with her mother's family in Taunton,
Massachusetts. Marjory said, "I wanted to go to a good college,
and my mind was set on Wellesley. Wellesley was the nearest good
college in those days and I chose it even though my good friends
were going elsewhere." In her autobiography, Marjory Stoneman
Douglas: Voice of the River, Douglas speaks of faculty who impressed
her and those who had an impact on her. During her senior year she
was quite involved in extracurricular activities. She was a member
of the Scribblers (a literary group), editor-in-chief of the yearbook,
and served on the executive board of the Equal Suffrage League.
After
Douglas graduated from Wellesley College in 1912, she took a salesmanship
course in Boston and worked in department stores in St. Louis and
Newark. In 1914 she married a newspaper editor, Kenneth Douglas,
but the marriage did not work out. Douglas needed both a job and
a divorce, so in the fall of 1915 she moved to Miami. Her father
whom she had not seen in years was in the newspaper business there.
Douglas became a reporter and writer. Her short stories appeared
in the Saturday Evening Post, Collier's, and Woman's
Home Companion. Her novel, Road to the Sun, appeared
in 1951. She also wrote Freedom River; Hurricane;
Alligator Crossing; Florida: the Long Frontier; The
Key to Paris; and a play, The Gallows Gate. She worked
on, but never published, a biography of W.H. Hudson, ornithologist,
environmentalist and author of Green Mansions. During the
1920s she taught at the University of Miami and lectured at Pennsylvania
State University.
Douglas was active in her community. She served as the first president
of the Business and Professional League, established in Miami in
1916. She also worked to improve housing in poorer Miami neighborhoods,
and started a baby milk fund for families who could not afford milk
for their children.
In the 1940s Marjory Stoneman Douglas was asked to do a book on
the Miami River for a series of books on American rivers. She convinced
the editor to expand her assignment to include the Everglades.
She learned how the rapid commercial development of South Florida
was threatening the vast, slow moving stream of shallow water and
saw grass which had covered much of South Florida. The Everglades:
River of Grass, appeared in 1947. Her description of the Everglades
as a "river of grass" caught the public's imagination.
Her
efforts to have the Everglades named a national park were only the
first salvo in a life-long crusade to save this unique resource.
As Florida grew and developed, people wanted to drain these wetlands
to facilitate agricultural and commercial use of the land. The U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers undertook a program of flood control, constructing
a system of canals, levees, dams and pump stations to drain the
wetlands and control seasonal flooding. Mrs. Douglas argued that
these changes to the natural water flow damaged the entire ecosystem
of South Florida by decreasing the amount of fresh water in the
Everglades. In 1969 she helped found the Friends
of the Everglades, an educational and advocacy group dedicated
to the protection and restoration of this ecosystem. In a 1983 article
Douglas explained her mission simply, "It's women's business to
be interested in the environment. It's an extended form of housekeeping,
isn't it?" She was a skilled and persuasive advocate. "I'm just
a tough old woman," she said. "They can't be rude to me. I have
all this white hair. I take advantage of every thing I can
age, hair, disability because my cause is just."
Marjory Stoneman Douglas died on May 14, 1998.
To learn more read Marjory Stoneman Douglas: Voice of the River:
an Autobiography, by Marjory Stoneman Douglas with John Rothchild
[Englewood, Fla.: Pineapple Press, c1987]
Written by Wilma Slaight
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