YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK
The history of people in Yosemite goes back thousands of years. American Indians traveled and used this area since Ice Age glaciers receded providing an environment for plants, animals, and people to survive. Their descendents remain a part of Yosemite’s history to the present day.
In 1849, the discovery of gold in California meant new groups of people arriving in California. Competition for land and resources brought many of these groups into conflict, and, often, into violent confrontations. The first non-native group to enter Yosemite was the Mariposa Battalion, a Euro-American militia formed to drive the native Ahwahneechee people onto reservations. After the Mariposa Indian War came to a close, Yosemite was now open to settlement and speculation.
Through the work of illustrators, authors, painters, and photographers, word spread of the magnificent valley in the heart of the Sierra Nevada and giant trees. Many pioneers became tourist operators, building hotels and inns and starting stagecoach companies to bring the interested early tourists on the long journey to Yosemite. Thanks to the information provided by early conservationists such as John Muir, by 1864, the value of Yosemite was recognised by the federal government when Abraham Lincoln signed the Yosemite Grant, placing Yosemite under the protection of the state of California.
With his stunning black and white images, the photographer Ansel Adams helped put Yosemite on an international footing and today travellers from all over the world visit this beautiful preserved wilderness.
Teddy the explorer
Lower Yosemite Falls
The falls feed into the Merced River
Boardwalk to Yosemite Falls
Burnt pines
Plenty of meltwater in late spring
Mirror lake
Rockfall blocks the trail !
Old Moose antler
Half Dome - made famous by photographer Ansel Adams
Yosemite Falls
Merced River
Unusual traffic island
View of the Yosemite Valley looking towards Yosemite Falls
Snow blocked our preferred route to Lake Tahoe, where there was a blizzard in June !

