Issaquah Alps Trails Club - History

History

As the Seattle area grew, residential development concentrated in the flatlands and generally avoided the higher elevations, leaving a large green zone of relatively undeveloped land (centered around the bedroom community of Issaquah) to bisect the eastern suburbs and exurbs of Seattle. This situation soon changed after most of the bottom land was locked up. Author and outdoorsman Harvey Manning promoted the "Issaquah Blobs" to Alps in the pages of his 1976 trail guide for the Seattle area, Footsore 1 with the aim of promoting the preservation of the large area of uplands which lie along I-90.

Newspaper articles soon appeared revealing the Issaquah Alps to a wider public. Roughly 100 hikers came together for two "public stunts" in November 1977 and in April 1979 to further raise awareness of the wilderness on the edge of Seattle. In May 1979 atop Long View Peak at Cougar Mountain the hikers officially organized as a trails club. The IATC has had a few setbacks from developers (notably Grand Ridge on the Sammamish Plateau) but overall they have been greatly instrumental in getting King County and local communities to set aside much of the Alps for recreational use. The club is now working with the Snoqualmie Valley Trails Club to advocate land management for the Mountains-to-Sound Greenway.

Read more about this topic:  Issaquah Alps Trails Club

Famous quotes containing the word history:

    There is nothing truer than myth: history, in its attempt to “realize” myth, distorts it, stops halfway; when history claims to have “succeeded” this is nothing but humbug and mystification. Everything we dream is “realizable.” Reality does not have to be: it is simply what it is.
    Eugène Ionesco (b. 1912)

    When the coherence of the parts of a stone, or even that composition of parts which renders it extended; when these familiar objects, I say, are so inexplicable, and contain circumstances so repugnant and contradictory; with what assurance can we decide concerning the origin of worlds, or trace their history from eternity to eternity?
    David Hume (1711–1776)

    To care for the quarrels of the past, to identify oneself passionately with a cause that became, politically speaking, a losing cause with the birth of the modern world, is to experience a kind of straining against reality, a rebellious nonconformity that, again, is rare in America, where children are instructed in the virtues of the system they live under, as though history had achieved a happy ending in American civics.
    Mary McCarthy (1912–1989)