
Thunderstorm, Yosemite Valley
Articles, John Muir Trail, Story Behind the ImageAnsel Adams made this photograph of Thunderstorm, Yosemite Valley at the famous Tunnel View with his large format view camera.

Bridalveil Fall, Yosemite National Park
Articles, John Muir Trail, Story Behind the ImageBridalveil Fall is one of Yosemite's premier attraction. Native Americans referred to Bridalveil as Pohono. Ansel made this classic image in 1927.

Frozen Lake and Cliffs, Sierra Nevada, Sequoia National Park, 1932
Articles, John Muir Trail, Story Behind the ImageIn 1919, Ansel joined the Sierra Club as custodian of their headquarters in Yosemite , during the club outing, he captured "Frozen Lake and Cliffs."

Conserving the Spirit of Yosemite: Ansel Adams’ Early Years in the Sierra Club
Ansel Adams Original Photographs, Ansel Adams, Family, and Friends, Articles, John Muir Trail There is perhaps no photographer in American history who stood for the ethos of stewardship for our shared environment as much as Ansel Adams, who over the course of his decades-long career did more than just introduce Americans to their wild places, but encouraged them to protect them.

Ansel Adams, Environmentalist
Ansel Adams, Family, and Friends, Ansel Page Main Articles, Articles, Conservation, John Muir Trail
Path, Muir Woods
Articles, John Muir Trail, Story Behind the ImageIn 1919, when Adams made this photograph, he was 17 years old and experimenting with photography. He was most likely still using the Box Brownie his father gave him in Yosemite in 1916.

High Sierra Loop
Articles, John Muir Trail, Yosemite ExperiencesWith over 800 miles of trails to choose from in the park, there is one fifty mile loop that holds a special place in the hearts and minds of Yosemite 's devoted. It is a route that gives an up close and personal view of the mountains that John Muir dubbed “The Range of Light.”

Ansel Adams Wilderness
Ansel Adams, Family, and Friends, Articles, John Muir Trail, Yosemite Experiences
Ansel Adams: The Role of the Artist in the Environmental Movement
Ansel Adams, Family, and Friends, Articles, Biography, John Muir TrailIn the history of American conservation, few have worked as long and as effectively to preserve wilderness and to articulate the “wilderness idea” as Ansel Adams. Entering his seventh decade of active involvement, he remains as much a crusader. Wilderness has always been for Adams “a mystique: a valid, intangible, non-materialistic experience.” Through his photographs he has touched countless people with a sense of that mystique and a realization of the importance of preserving the last remaining wilderness lands. This inspirational legacy of Adams ' art constitutes his major significance as an environmentalist. In addition, he has been an important activist in the work of several conservation groups and has personally lobbied congressmen, cabinet officers and Presidents on behalf of wilderness values.
Ansel Adams was born on February 20, 1902, in San Francisco and grew up in the dunes area by the Golden Gate . In those days the Pacific surf and fog were a much more evident influence than the surrounding city. Ansel's earliest memory is of lying in his carriage watching low fog move across the sky.