Utah Wilderness Association records
Scope and Contents
The Utah Wilderness Association collection is broken down into record groups, series, and sub-series. There are ten record groups ranging in size from two or three boxes to seventy-six. The first record group is Administration and contains all of the membership and volunteer files, minutes from board meetings, flyers, events, general press releases about the organization, and fundraising information. The second record group, and largest, is the BLM (Bureau of Land Management). The Utah Wilderness Association spent a great deal of time appealing decisions by the BLM regarding Utah's wilderness. (Most of these files are located in the BLM: General Wilderness Files series.)
The remaining BLM record group is divided into series by geographical area, for example Vernal District and Richfield District. The Forest Service record group which is as large as the BLM, is similarly broken down into geographical regions. After the initial series of Forest Service: Wilderness Files and Forest Service: General Files, which apply to files covering broad forestry issues in Utah, subsequent series have a tighter focus and contain files relating to one specific forest or national forest in Utah. A similar record group, Forest Planning, follows. Containing only thirteen boxes, Forest Planning houses information pertaining to policy, growth, and ecosystem management in forestry. The National Park record group contains files for the national parks in Utah, such as Arches, Capital Reef, and Zion, each within its own series. General Environmental Issues is a catch-all record group. It contains files on air quality, energy issues, public opinion on uses of natural resources, and wildlife issues. The Wildlife series only has six boxes, but houses all the information on bear baiting, cougar and Sandhill crane hunting, all of which the UWA strongly opposed.
The Utah Wilderness Act record group contains five boxes chronicling the fight for protecting Utah's wild lands. The record group contains public comments to state legislators, notes and papers from state hearings in Utah, as well as from the U.S. House and Senate Hearings. Box 5 contains hundreds of news clippings and press releases about the Utah Wilderness Act of 1984, including articles about the 1985 dedication of the wilderness areas.
The collection ends with three small record groups, the first of which is RARE II. This group contains files on the Roadless Area Review Evaluation of 1978, including many journal and magazine articles, maps, and specific data on areas studied. The Utah Wilderness Association Review newsletters are housed in the UWA Reviews record group. The newsletter was produced bi-monthly from 1981-1996. This collection is incomplete, but additional Utah Wilderness Association Reviews are located in another area of Special Collections (call numbers 591.9792 W645n and 591.9792 W645r). The final record group is labeled Maps and contains two boxes. The maps pertain to wilderness areas in Utah and Idaho, mostly national forests.
- Record groups include: Series I: Administration (Board of Directors, Political Correspondence, Financial, Personnel, Miscellaneous, Membership, Fund-raising, Events, Calendars, Publications, Wildlife Issues)
- Series II: Bureau of Land Management (General Wilderness Files, Cedar City District, Deep Creek Mountains, Moab District, Vernal District, Richfield District, Salt Lake City District)
- Series III: Forest Service-National Forests (Wilderness Files, General Files, High Uintas Wilderness, Ashley Forest, Dixie National Forest, Fishlake National Forest, Manti LaSal Forest, Uinta National Forest, Wasatch-Cache National Fores)
- Series IV: Forest Planning
- Series V: National Parks (Arches, Canyon Lands, Capital Reef National Park, Cedar Breaks, Dinosaur National Monument, Glen Canyon Recreation Area, Great Basin National Park, Zion National Park, National Park (Misc.), Nuclear Waste Repository, General)
- Series VI: General Environmental Issues (Clean Air, Central Utah Project, Energy, Miscellaneous, Water, State Land, Sage Brush Rebellion, Wildlife)
- Series VII: Utah Wilderness Act
- Series VIII: RARE II (Roadless Area Review Evaluation)
- Series IX: UWA Reviews (Newsletters)
- Series X: Maps
Dates
- 1980-2000
Language of Materials
Collection materials are in English.
Restrictions
Open to public research.
Copyright
It is the responsibility of the user to obtain permission to publish from the owner of the copyright (the institution, the creator of the record, the author or his/her transferees, heirs, legates, or literary executors). The user agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the Utah State University Libraries, its officers, employees, and agents from and against all claims made by any person asserting that he or she is an owner of copyright.
Permission to publish material from the Utah Wilderness Association records must be obtained from the Special Collections Manuscript Curator and/or the Special Collections Department Head.
Historical Note
The Utah Wilderness Association was organized in 1979 as a voice for Utah's wilderness. Dick Carter, Hyrum resident and former Utah representative for the Wilderness Society, founded the Utah Wilderness Association in the midst of the Bureau of Land Management's 1980 inventory of Utah lands and the Forest Service's second RARE (Roadless Area Review Evaluation) study, both of which pushed the UWA into action to further protect Utah wilderness.
RARE II was to determine which undeveloped areas needed preserving as part of a national wildlife preservation system and which areas needed no further study and should be open for other uses. In Utah, RARE II suggested that 14 areas be preserved, while Utah wilderness activists, like Dick Carter believed that many more areas were worth preserving. The 1978 RARE II recommendations and the 1979 initial action of the BLM to drop 17 million of the 22 million acres in Utah being reviewed, pushed Dick Carter into forming the UWA.
The UWA appealed the BLM's report and lobbied for the addition of 900,000 more acres in Utah. The UWA, along with other scientists and activists, compiled a 1,400 page appeal and submitted it to the Interior Department's Board of Land Appeals in 1981.(1) The appeal was enacted in 1983, leading to the push for a Utah Wilderness Act, which was signed into law by President Reagan in 1984. In less than five years of operation the UWA achieved significant legislation and public notice for wilderness lands in Utah. Initially, the Utah Wilderness Act created twelve officially sanctioned wilderness areas in Utah, including the High Uintas, Mt. Nebo near Nephi, the Wellsville Mountains in Cache Valley, and Mt. Naomi in northern Cache County. The dedication ceremony took place in August of 1985 with an emotional Dick Carter speaking about the importance of Utah's wilderness and stressing that much needs to be done to preserve other Utah acreage not covered by the Wilderness Act.(2)
The organization grew from about a dozen members at its first meeting in May 1979 to more than one thousand committed members in the early 1990s, mostly from northern Utah.(3) Other issues that concerned the members of the Utah Wilderness Association were grazing, timber harvesting, and especially oil drilling in Utah wildernesses. On numerous occasions, the UWA appealed drilling and oil exploration in the High Uintas.
The mission statement of the Utah Wilderness Association declares that the organization "is dedicated to the preservation of Utah's wilderness, public lands, and the flora and fauna dependent upon them." Though a greater percentage of the organization's efforts were centered on wilderness and land usage, some of the more prominent wildlife issues that UWA advocated were bans on bear baiting, as well as Sandhill crane and cougar hunting. Concerned with these issues, the Utah Wilderness Association published "A Utah Wildlife Manifesto" in 1989, which was updated periodically in the following years. Though the document was labeled "anti-hunting" by some readers, the UWA contended that the concern of the Manifesto was wildlife management. The Manifesto called for the initiation of a multi-purpose wildlife license for both hunting and non-consumptive wildlife use, the establishment of wildlife preserves and refuges, the development of educational programs, and the promotion of wildlife as a tourism and recreation benefit. In addition, the Manifesto was concerned with the composition of state policy-making boards, such as the Wildlife Board and Board of Big Game Control. The UWA felt that there was not adequate representation on these boards for the non-consumptive environmental and wildlife constituency.(4)
The Utah Wilderness Association was active until 1996, when several board members left the association, including founder Dick Carter, and the organization lacked sufficient funds to continue. The UWA went into "hibernation" and virtually ceased all operations. In seventeen years of active existence the UWA remained committed to its mission: "We provide detailed technical analysis of and make recommendations on specific public resource and land management issues. We publish a newsletter discussing issues which affect Utah's public lands and wildlife; host educational seminars, field trips and workshops; and promote grassroots activism.(5) The bi-monthly newsletter, Utah Wilderness Association Review, was a way to let the members know what issues the UWA was actively pursuing. The UWA also spent a great deal of time fundraising. The first organized fundraiser was in 1979, when Edward Abbey gave a lecture at the University of Utah's Olpin Union Ballroom, and a felt hat and an old shoe were passed around the audience to collect money.(6) The UWA relied heavily on donations, annual membership dues, and volunteers to maintain the organization.
The Utah Wilderness Association also devoted as much effort to educating the public as it did to passing environmental legislation. Through poetry contests, lecture series, workshops, and public awareness programs, the Utah Wilderness Association made sure that the public recognized the association's efforts. Dick Carter, in his farewell letter, recognized the positive impact of the organization: "While our achievements are widely recognized, including the Utah Wilderness Act of 1984 which designated 12 Utah National Forest wildernesses, our real success was the ‘mainstreaming' of a Utah environmental movement."(7)
Currently (June 2003) Dick Carter is directing a new organization called the High Uintas Preservation Council, which is dedicated to many of the same causes as the UWA.
- Note:
- 1"Group Files 1,400-page wilds appeal,Deseret News 24 Aug. 1981, 8D.
- 2 Tom Wharton, "Utah's Officials Dedicate New Wilderness Areas," Salt Lake Tribune 29 Aug. 1985, B1+.
- 3 Amy E. Brennan, "Grassroots of the desert: an analysis of the Utah Wilderness Association and the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance in the debate over wilderness designation of Bureau of Land Management lands in southern Utah," (Thesis, Utah State University, 1998), 86.
- 4"A Utah Wildlife Manifesto." Published by the Utah Wilderness Association, Feb. 1990.Located in Record Group [General Environmental Issues], Series [Wildlife] Box 5.
- 5 "Mission of the Utah Wilderness Association." Utah Wilderness Association Review July-Aug. 1992, 8.
- 6 Anne Wilson, "Wilderness Author Speaks at Benefit," Salt Lake Tribune 30 Oct. 1979, D2.
- 7From the Utah Wilderness Association Review March-April 1996: 2
Extent
233 boxes (105 linear ft.)
Abstract
There are ten record groups: Administration contains all of the membership and volunteer files, minutes from board meetings, flyers, events, general press releases about the organization, and fundraising information; Bureau of Land Management; Forest Service-National Forests; National Parks; Forest Planning, which houses information pertaining to policy, growth, and ecosystem management in forestry; General Environmental Issues is a catch-all record group, with files on air quality, energy issues, public opinion on uses of natural resources, and wildlife issues; the Utah Wilderness Act record group chronicles the fight for protecting Utah's wild lands; RARE II record group contains files on the Roadless Area Review Evaluation of 1978, including many journal and magazine articles, maps, and specific data on areas studied; the Utah Wilderness Association Review newsletters are housed in the UWA Reviews record group; the Maps group pertains to wilderness areas in Utah and Idaho, mostly national forests.
Arrangement
The Utah Wilderness Association collection is broken down into record groups, series, and sub-series.
Immediate Source of Acquisition
The Utah Wilderness Association collection was donated by Dick Carter. The majority was donated in 1996 after the organization went into "hibernation," and subsequent sets of materials were sent to Special Collections in 1998 and 1999.
Processing Information
Collection processed by: John L. Powell. Register created by: John L. Powell, June 1997. Collection and register updated by: Matthew Stiffler, June 2003.
- Title
- Guide to the Utah Wilderness Association records 1980-2000
- Author
- Finding aid created by Special Collections and Archives.
- Date
- ©2008
- Description rules
- Finding Aid Based On Dacs (Describing Archives: A Content Standard)
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
- Language of description note
- Finding guide is in English in Latin script.
- Sponsor
- Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) grant, 2007-2008
Revision Statements
- December 8, 2008 and August 9, 2010: Series were labeled with Roman numerals, sub-series were labeled with Arabic numerals and letters.
- 2009: Template information was updated to reflect Archives West best practice guidelines.
Repository Details
Part of the Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives Repository
Merrill-Cazier Library
Utah State University
3000 Old Main Hill
Logan Utah 84322-3000 United States
435 797-8248
435 797-2880 (Fax)
scweb@usu.edu