Rachel Carson (1907 - 1964)
Shenandoah's
main thoroughfare, Rachel Carson Drive, encircles Lake Frederick,
unifying the Shenandoah community. The road is named in honor of
scientist and nature writer Rachel Carson, who is credited with
bringing world attention to the issue of environmental protection.
Carson was a quiet, private person, and like many people who have
gravitated to the Shenandoah community because of its serenity and
dramatic natural beauty, she was fascinated with the workings of
nature. Her interest was not merely scientific, but aesthetic as
well.
Rachel
Carson grew up on a small Pennsylvania farm and attended the
Pennsylvania College for Women, where she majored in zoology. At
Johns Hopkins University she received a master's degree in
genetics. Immediately after completing her schooling in 1932, she
began writing science articles for newspapers and working at the
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute. When her father died suddenly in
1935, she needed to a steady salary to help support her family, and
went to work for the Bureau of Fisheries (later the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service) in Washington, D.C.
In
1941 Carson published her first book, Under
the Sea-Wind.
She went on to write The
Sea Around Us
and The
Edge of the Sea,
and finally Silent
Spring
in
1962. Her science and nature writing was serialized in magazines, and
she had a devoted following. The
Sea Around Us
won the National Book Award in 1951, and that year she received a
Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship.
Her
books brought her considerable fame, both positive and negative. In
the wake of Silent
Spring,
which described the dangers of pesticides, she was attacked
personally, and her scientific credentials were questioned by
chemical companies and other vested interests. She mostly did not
reply, but let the book speak for itself. In one interview, however,
she was asked, "Miss Carson, what do YOU eat?" And she
replied, "Chlorinated hydrocarbons, like everyone else."
Despite
innumerable personal tragedies while she was working on Silent
Spring
(she was seriously ill, a niece died and left a young son whom she
adopted, her mother died, and she learned she had cancer) Carson
produced a book that would become a long-term best-seller and would
be translated into many languages. Her central thesis was that the
economy would flourish only if every individual took part in its
preservation.
Esquire
magazine wrote, "The book that her efforts resulted in was about
spraying and what it did to the birds and other creatures. But that
does not begin to describe its scope or account for its impact. One
might just as well say that Darwin wrote about turtles and the
Pacific islands where they were found."
Carson
died two years after Silent
Spring
was published, at age 56.
Adapted
from PBS A Science Odyssey: People and Discoveries