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chick-on
Basil,
I read somewhere that Kings was created as an appeasement more or less to Muir after what occurred in Hetch Hetchy.
My understanding is that there was an early proposal for a "John Muir National Park" that would have included most of the land between Sequoia and Yosemite--basically the current Kings Canyon NP and the John Muir and Ansel Adams Wildernesses. Kings Canyon was created in 1940--long after Muir's death, but it didn't include Cedar Grove or Tehipite Valley, as these were sites for proposed hydroelectric dams, and it was believed (probably correctly) that there would never be another opportunity to create a reservoir within a national park (ironically in part because many of those who backed the Raker Act also backed the National Park Service Organic Act a year or so later). Thus the "limbo" status of Cedar Grove--it was a prime location for development for Kings Canyon NP, but was in fact in Sierra National Forest--and under threat of being flooded--until 1965.
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chick-on
And it is a big reason why the road ends at Roads End and doesn't continue all the way thru to 395 on the other side.
Many, including David Brower, Ansel Adams, Norman Livermore, fought the hard fight against this (and other) trans-Sierra highways. The Roads End-Onion Valley route seems to have died when Govenor Reagan opposed it after he participated in a Sierra trek reminiscent of the Mather Mountain Party that was organized by Livermore. (FWIW, Livermore is currently with Restore Hetch Hetchy, still fighting what could be considered the original, big environmental fight...)
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chick-on
I think also that the HSCs were only suppose to be around for so long and they
would be removed. I always find it amusing the number of people opposed to the
Awahnee but those same people are ok with HSC and all the campgrounds.
Does not compute. Probably if they could get in for cheap they'd be all over it
like Chick-on on a Twinkie.
I believe the 1984 California Wilderness Act specifies that the HSCs are excluded as pre-existing conditions, but should the camps be removed, their locations would be included in the Yosemite Wilderness. The park service manages them as potential wilderness additions. A few alternatives of the current Merced River management plans recommend closing Merced Lake HSC, and septic/leach field issues continue to be a challenge at most of the camps, especially Vogelsang.