Galen Clark was the best mountaineer
I ever met, and one of the kindest and most amiable
of all my mountain friends. I first met him at
his Wawona ranch forty-three years ago on my first
visit to Yosemite. I had entered the Valley with
one companion by way of Coulterville, and returned
by what was then known as the Mariposa trail.
Both trails were buried in deep snow where the elevation
was from 5000 to 7000 feet above sea level in the
sugar pine and silver fir regions. We had no
great difficulty, however, in finding our way by the
trends of the main features of the topography.
Botanizing by the way, we made slow, plodding progress,
and were again about out of provisions when we reached
Clark’s hospitable cabin at Wawona. He kindly
furnished us with flour and a little sugar and tea,
and my companion, who complained of the be-numbing
poverty of a strictly vegetarian diet, gladly accepted
Mr. Clark’s offer of a piece of a bear that had
just been killed. After a short talk about bears
and the forests and the way to the Big Trees, we pushed
on up through the Wawona firs and sugar pines, and
camped in the now-famous Mariposa grove.
Later, after making my home in the
Yosemite Valley, I became well acquainted with Mr.
Clark, while he was guardian. He was elected again
and again to this important office by different Boards
of Commissioners on account of his efficiency and
his real love of the Valley.
Although nearly all my mountaineering
has been done without companions, I had the pleasure
of having Galen Clark with me on three excursions.
About thirty-five years ago I invited him to accompany
me on a trip through the Big Tuolumne Canyon from
Hetch Hetchy Valley. The canyon up to that time
had not been explored, and knowing that the difference
in the elevation of the river at the head of the canyon
and in Hetch Hetchy was about 5000 feet, we expected
to find some magnificent cataracts or falls; nor were
we disappointed. When we were leaving Yosemite
an ambitious young man begged leave to join us.
I strongly advised him not to attempt such a long,
hard trip, for it would undoubtedly prove very trying
to an inexperienced climber. He assured us, however,
that he was equal to anything, would gladly meet every
difficulty as it came, and cause us no hindrance or
trouble of any sort. So at last, after repeating
our advice that he give up the trip, we consented to
his joining us. We entered the canyon by way
of Hetch Hetchy Valley, each carrying his own provisions,
and making his own tea, porridge, bed, etc.
In the morning of the second day out
from Hetch Hetchy we came to what is now known as
“Muir Gorge,” and Mr. Clark without hesitation
prepared to force a way through it, wading and jumping
from one submerged boulder to another through the
torrent, bracing and steadying himself with a long
pole. Though the river was then rather low, the
savage, roaring, surging song it was ringing was rather
nerve-trying, especially to our inexperienced companion.
With careful assistance, however, I managed to get
him through, but this hard trial, naturally enough,
proved too much and he informed us, pale and trembling,
that he could go no farther. I gathered some
wood at the upper throat of the gorge, made a fire
for him and advised him to feel at home and make himself
comfortable, hoped he would enjoy the grand scenery
and the songs of the water-ouzels which haunted the
gorge, and assured him that we would return some time
in the night, though it might be late, as we wished
to go on through the entire canyon if possible.
We pushed our way through the dense chaparral and
over the earthquake taluses with such speed that we
reached the foot of the upper cataract while we had
still an hour or so of daylight for the return trip.
It was long after dark when we reached our adventurous,
but nerve-shaken companion who, of course, was anxious
and lonely, not being accustomed to solitude, however
kindly and flowery and full of sweet bird-song and
stream-song. Being tired we simply lay down in
restful comfort on the river bank beside a good fire,
instead of trying to go down the gorge in the dark
or climb over its high shoulder to our blankets and
provisions, which we had left in the morning in a tree
at the foot of the gorge. I remember Mr. Clark
remarking that if he had his choice that night between
provisions and blankets he would choose his blankets.
The next morning in about an hour
we had crossed over the ridge through which the gorge
is cut, reached our provisions, made tea, and had a
good breakfast. As soon as we had returned to
Yosemite I obtained fresh provisions, pushed off alone
up to the head of Yosemite Creek basin, entered the
canyon by a side canyon, and completed the exploration
up to the Tuolumne Meadows.
It was on this first trip from Hetch
Hetchy to the upper cataracts that I had convincing
proofs of Mr. Clark’s daring and skill as mountaineer,
particularly in fording torrents, and in forcing his
way through thick chaparral. I found it somewhat
difficult to keep up with him in dense, tangled brush,
though in jumping on boulder taluses and slippery
cobble-beds I had no difficulty in leaving him behind.
After I had discovered the glaciers
on Mount Lyell and Mount McClure, Mr. Clark kindly
made a second excursion with me to assist in establishing
a line of stakes across the McClure glacier to measure
its rate of flow. On this trip we also climbed
Mount Lyell together, when the snow which covered
the glacier was melted into upleaning, icy blades
which were extremely difficult to cross, not being
strong enough to support our weight, nor wide enough
apart to enable us to stride across each blade as
it was met. Here again I, being lighter, had no
difficulty in keeping ahead of him. While resting
after wearisome staggering and falling he stared at
the marvelous ranks of leaning blades, and said, “I
think I have traveled all sorts of trails and canyons,
through all kinds of brush and snow, but this gets
me.”
Mr. Clark at my urgent request joined
my small party on a trip to the Kings River yosemite
by way of the high mountains, most of the way without
a trail. He joined us at the Mariposa Big Tree
grove and intended to go all the way, but finding
that, on account of the difficulties encountered,
the time required was much greater than he expected,
he turned back near the head of the north fork of the
Kings River.
In cooking his mess of oatmeal porridge
and making tea, his pot was always the first to boil,
and I used to wonder why, with all his skill in scrambling
through brush in the easiest way, and preparing his
meals, he was so utterly careless about his beds.
He would lie down anywhere on any ground, rough or
smooth, without taking pains even to remove cobbles
or sharp-angled rocks protruding through the grass
or gravel, saying that his own bones were as hard
as any stones and could do him no harm.
His kindness to all Yosemite visitors
and mountaineers was marvelously constant and uniform.
He was not a good business man, and in building an
extensive hotel and barns at Wawona, before the travel
to Yosemite had been greatly developed, he borrowed
money, mortgaged his property and lost it all.
Though not the first to see the Mariposa
Big Tree grove, he was the first to explore it, after
he had heard from a prospector, who had passed through
the grove and who gave him the indefinite information,
that there were some wonderful big trees up there on
the top of the Wawona hill and that he believed they
must be of the same kind that had become so famous
and well-known in the Calaveras grove farther north.
On this information, Galen Clark told me, he went up
and thoroughly explored the grove, counting the trees
and measuring the largest, and becoming familiar with
it. He stated also that he had explored the forest
to the southward and had discovered the much larger
Fresno grove of about two square miles, six or seven
miles distant from the Mariposa grove. Unfortunately
most of the Fresno grove has been cut and flumed down
to the railroad near Madera.
Mr. Clark was truly and literally
a gentle-man. I never heard him utter a hasty,
angry, fault-finding word. His voice was uniformly
pitched at a rather low tone, perfectly even, although
lances of his eyes and slight intonations of his voice
often indicated that something funny or mildly sarcastic
was coming, but upon the whole he was serious and industrious,
and, however deep and fun-provoking a story might be,
he never indulged in boisterous laughter.
He was very fond of scenery and once
told me after I became acquainted with him that he
liked “nothing in the world better than climbing
to the top of a high ridge or mountain and looking
off.” He preferred the mountain ridges
and domes in the Yosemite regions on account of the
wealth and beauty of the forests. Often times
he would take his rifle, a few pounds of bacon, a
few pound of flour, and a single blanket and go off
hunting, for no other reason than to explore and get
acquainted with the most beautiful points of view
within a journey of a week or two from his Wawona
home. On these trips he was always alone and could
indulge in tranquil enjoyment of Nature to his heart’s
content. He said that on those trips, when he
was a sufficient distance from home in a neighborhood
where he wished to linger, he always shot a deer, sometimes
a grouse, and occasionally a bear. After diminishing
the weight of a deer or bear by eating part of it,
he carried as much as possible of the best of the
meat to Wawona, and from his hospitable well-supplied
cabin no weary wanderer ever went away hungry or unrested.
The value of the mountain air in prolonging
life is well examplified in Mr. Clark’s case.
While working in the mines he contracted a severe cold
that settled on his lungs and finally caused severe
inflammation and bleeding, and none of his friends
thought he would ever recover. The physicians
told him he had but a short time to live. It was
then that he repaired to the beautiful sugar pine
woods at Wawona and took up a claim, including the
fine meadows there, and building his cabin, began
his life of wandering and exploring in the glorious
mountains about him, usually going bare-headed.
In a remarkably short time his lungs were healed.
He was one of the most sincere tree-lovers
I ever knew. About twenty years before his death
he made choice of a plot in the Yosemite cemetery
on the north side of the Valley, not far from the Yosemite
Fall, and selecting a dozen or so of seedling séquoias
in the Mariposa grove he brought them to the Valley
and planted them around the spot he had chosen for
his last rest. The ground there is gravelly and
dry; by careful watering he finally nursed most of
the seedlings into good, thrifty trees, and doubtless
they will long shade the grave of their blessed lover
and friend.