Former
Director of the National Park Service,
Newton B. Drury,
once observed that national parks are established not solely to preserve
scenic landscapes and historic places, but also to provide a greater
dividend because of their unique value in "Ministering
to the Human Mind and Spirit"
Each National park site exists because
it has some transcendent meaning. It was designated because an influential
group of people saw the site as meaningful and significant to the values
and interests of the American people.
Many park visitors understand this meaning
when they visit national
parks.

A key mission of a publisher-interpreter
is to promote the protection and preservation
of the resource. If the American public is to take a committed and active
role in the protection and preservation of the resource, it is critical
that they become sensitized to the value of the resource. When visitors
care more about the resource, when they come to understand their own
relationship to the resource, their values, loves, beliefs, and spiritual
awareness, they may be motivated to action resulting in stewardship
for that resource.
It is essential that interpeters-publishers
realize their primary role is to cultivate this care and love for the
resource and what it represents.
It is the job of interpreter-publishers
to connect readers to the meaning of the resource and provoke care.
"While human
technologies have temporarily remolded Glen Canyon,
the canyon has most certainly remolded our ecological consciousness.
It has awakened us to certain environmental questions and consequences:
questions regarding humanity's right to reshape the world, and the consequences
of running out of world to reshape.!" -
Essay by Anne Markward
"Yellowstone
is not just a place, it is an ideal. While its original intent was to
preserve geothermal" curiosities," it has come to symbolize
something far greater. It represents one of the few times in the history
of Western culture when voice and dignity have been given to wildness
-- to plans, and animals and process." --
From a Compelling Story Workshop at Yellowstone
". . .
nothing short of defending this country in wartime compares in importance
with the great central task of leaving this land even a better land
for our decedents than it is for us . . . " --
President theodore Roosevelt.
"The Everglades
are a test. If we pass the test, we get to keep planet earth."
-- Marjorie Stoneman Douglas
The units of the National Park system preserve
tangible resources. These three things generally represent the tangible,
primary resources of National Parks.
Objects:
Museum collections, exhibits, and research collections are filled with
original objects of great significance. These objects only have meaning,
however, in a larger context--their significance must be linked to ideas
and values through education.
Places:
From vast wilderness to intimate historic sites, the sense of place,
as preserved and protected within the park system has the potential
for powerful lessons. The National Park Service preserves much more
than scenery. Just being in a place where something of great significance
occurred can have a "transforming" effect.
Events:
Often the preservation efforts of the National Park Service focus less
on tangible resources and more on events that occurred over a span of
time and geography. What happened may be as important as where it happened.
"Black
Canyon is like no other place on earth--it has is own feeling, is own
rhythm, its own life, and more than anything, its own pervasive timelessness.
Time stands still here. We feel very small." --from
the Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Monument south Rim Driving
tour Guide
"The
care of rivers is not a question of rivers, but of the human heart."
-- Tanaka Shozo
"In great
deeds something abides. On great fields something stays. Forms change
and pass; bodies disappear; but spirits linger, to consecrate ground
for the vision-place of souls. And reverent men and women from afar,
and generations that know us not and that we know not of, heart-drawn
to see where and by whom great things were suffered and done for them,
shall come to this deathless field, to ponder and dream; and lo! the
shadow of a mighty presence shall wrap them in its bosom, and the power
of the vision pass into their souls." --
General Joshua Lawrence Chambelain, Gettysburg, october 3, 1889
"Nothing
speaks so eloquently of the tragedy of Georgia's Anersonville
as the row upon row of headstones in the National Cemetery. They represent
one of the greatest misfortunes of the Civil War. . . one of the by-products
of modern conflict: massive numbers of prisoners. 'Thurn
you to the stronghold, ye prisoners of hope'."
-- William C. "Jack" Davis
"Great
Smoky Mountains National Park thus preserves no only life
and land, but offers he proof and promise of society's commitment to
improving the quality of human life." -- Rita
Cantu
Now
the door is opened
for you
What's Next?
-You!
. . .You've got
to step
through it -- Now!