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TRANSMITTAL OF
PROPOSAL FORM
RESPONSE TO ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Dear
Mr.Yost:
Thank you for
informing us of receipt of our proposal to formally name Sharsmith Peak.
Regarding
your question of endorsement by the current superintendent’s office of
Yosemite National Park, we are not aware that the office has taken a
position on the matter of this naming The office has been informed of the
proposal and is being sent a duplicate of the package of information with
copies of endorsements that we have forwarded to your board, and which you
should receive shortly. The fact that four of the living former park
superintendents have written endorsements (Morehead, Griffin, Mihalik,
Binnewies) makes us hopeful that the present administration will continue in
support. Binnewies was also active in his support while superintendent as
was Arnberger (now deceased), based on preserved written communications.
Morehead is a member of the Name4Carl Committee. Too, two former regional
National Park Service directors and one former director are in favor, as
well as a former, now deceased, director of the U.S. Geological Survey.
We have noted
a posting on your website of this same proposal attributed to Mr. George
Durkee of Sierra Nature Notes and have also been informed by others that
they have written statements of support which they have sent directly to
your Board. Our Committee has in the past advised your Board of these other
expressions and now suggest that they be kept in a common file with our
proposal or in files that are cross-referenced.
William R
Jones, Lead Member, Name4Carl Committee (January 13, 2007)
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF RECEIPT OF PROPOSAL FORM BY
BOARD
This will acknowledge receipt of your
proposal to name a feature in California, Sharsmith Peak. We shall begin
processing the proposal, which will require approximately eight months to
process. As you are no doubt aware, the most important policy is local use and
acceptance, so we shall seek the recommendations of the county governments as
well as that of the California State Names Authority, the land management
agencies, and any other interested parties. You seem to be aware of the Board's
Wilderness Area Policy, and have addressed that policy's requirements. We shall
also be awaiting the documents of endorsement mentioned. You indicate that the
office of the park superintendent has "in the past" supported the proposal.
Does this mean that the office does not now do so? Actually, it is not really
relevant because a park superintendent or forest superintendent cannot (by
internal agency requirements) commit to support or lack of support on names
issues without first consulting with that agencies member to the U. S. Board on
Geographic Names (copied on this response) except, of course, as a private
citizen. We shall keep you informed of the progress, and let you know the
decision of the Board. Please let us know if you have questions.
For Louis A. Yost
Executive Secretary,
U.S. Board on Geographic Names
703.648.4552
(January 12, 2007)
LETTER TRANSMITTING PROPOSAL FORM
PROPOSAL FORM
|
email 01/09/2007 12:56 AM |
To:
cc:
Subject: GNIS-WEB-FORM-Sharsmith-Peak |
Proposed feature name: Sharsmith Peak
State or equivalent where feature is located: California
Is feature located in other states?: no
County were feature is located: Tuolumne and Mono common border
City, Town, Township were feature is located: NA
Administrative Area were feature is located: Yosemite National Park & Inyo
National Forest
Action requested: Proposed New Name selected
Why does feature need a name?:
To inspire future study and preservation of this area
in the spirit of naturalist Sharsmith. And to simplify
reference.
Feature type: mountain summit
GNIS feature?: No
Feature description:
mith established the Carl W. Sharsmith Herbarium at
San Jose State University, San Jose, California, where
he was professor of botany, a renowned expert in grasses
and alpine plants. While living, Dr. Sharsmith received
the Meritorius Service Award from the Department of
the Interior and the first Yosemite Award from that
park. His name established on a mountain peak will serve
to perpetuate awareness of his lifework so that continued
benefit may result from enhanced awareness of the dedication
of this man to his ideals of the use of education as
a means to understanding and effective correct action.
During his lifetime, Dr. Sharsmith was approached with
proposals to name features for him and appreciated the
thought; he specifically endorsed the present feature
to bear his name. The peak has borne other names: False
White Mountain Peak, False White, and Peak 12,002. These
can potentially lead to confusion in route finding for
recreationists and ski mountaineers as well as in management
by the agencies including county sheriffs, especially
in rescue situations, at least one of which has already
occurred on the mountain's flanks.
Name information:
The name Sharsmith Peak is from Dr. Carl W. Sharsmith
(1903-1994), Yosemite National Park ranger-naturalist
who served mainly in the Tuolumne Meadows area of the
High Sierra for over 60 summers and is deeply associated
with the region. For instance, the purposes of the Hall
Research Natural Area and the Yosemite Wilderness relate
directly to Carl's focus in alpine botany and his wish
to maintain natural areas for plants. Dr. Sharsmith
deeply touched the lives of thousands of persons through
his educational and motivational talents, and many of
these persons as a result launched careers, led conservation
organizations, or developed amateur interests in ecology
and conservation that further the purposes for which
the U.S. Congress established and maintains both Yosemite
National Park and Inyo National Forest and indeed the
national park and forest managing agencies themselves.
Dr. Sharsmith's science was botany, and he did original
meadow ecology research for use in management. Dr. Sharsmith
established the Carl W. Sharsmith Herbarium at San Jose
State University, San Jose, California, where he was
professor of botany, a renowned expert in grasses and
alpine plants. While living, Dr. Sharsmith received
the Meritorius Service Award from the Department of
the Interior and the first Yosemite Award from that
park. His name established on a mountain peak will serve
to perpetuate awareness of his lifework so that continued
benefit may result from enhanced awareness of the dedication
of this man to his ideals of the use of education as
a means to understanding and effective correct action.
During his lifetime, Dr. Sharsmith was approached with
proposals to name features for him and appreciated the
thought; he specifically endorsed the present feature
to bear his name. The peak has borne other names: False
White Mountain Peak, False White, and Peak 12,002. These
can potentially lead to confusion in route finding for
recreationists and ski mountaineers as well as in management
by the agencies including county sheriffs, especially
in rescue situations, at least one of which has already
occurred on the mountain's flanks.
Feature elevation: 12,002
Mouth or center of feature:
Latitude: N37 degrees 56.194 minutes
longitude: W119 degrees 17.615 minutes
Source of feature
Latitude: NA
longitude: NA
Maps and other published sources using name:
Julie Miller has used the name Sharsmith Peak for the
proposed peak for a guided hike she led for the Yosemite
Association to its summit, and this informal Sharsmith
Peak name has been published in a walk guide by the
Yosemite Association noted as follows: "Three Great
Peaks--Reach the top of three outstanding peaks in three
strenuous days of hiking. Julie Miller will guide her
gorup to the summits of Tuolumne Peak, Tenaya Peak,
and Sharsmith Peak". Beth Pratt, vice president of Yosemite
Association, notes, "Although Sharsmith isn't the official
name for the peak, apparently it is the familiar name
used by park insiders. John Carroll O'Neill and Elizabeth
Stone O'Neill write in Tioga Tramps re the proposed
point, on page 26, "There is an interest in naming this
mountain as a memorial to Yosemite's famous ranger-naturalist,
Carl Sharsmith."
Other names used for feature:
Peak 12,002, False White Mountain Peak, False White.
Those using these other names have supported the Sharsmith
Peak name instead.
Is proposed name in local usage?: Yes,5
Is there local opposition or conflict
regarding the proposed name: Yes
While there is overwhelming support for this naming,
a few have expressed the wish to have no new names at
all in wild areas. Many of those giving their support
feel almost the same way but note that in the case of
this one man they are making an exception and supporting
the proposal.
Additional information:
al Society. The office of the Superintendent of Yosemite
National Park has in the past supported the proposal.
Statements have been gathered and are posted on the
website www.name4carl.org and originals of same are
being transmitted physically to the board at this time.
Additionally, other individuals have said they have
forwarded their own letters of support.
Organizations or individuals which support proposed name:
The Name4Carl Committee consists of former Yosemite
National Park persons who in their later careers came
to poistions of influence as regional directors and
national division chiefs and planners as well as university
professors. Supporters include a former (now deceased)
director of the U.S. Geological Survey, the geologist
emeritus who mapped Yosemite, a former National Park
Service director, most living former Yosemite superintendents,
a state park director, legislators, ski mountaineers,
native Americans, a national conservation writer, and
many park visitors. The Yosemite Association, authorized
Yosemite National Park cooperating association, has
been involved in the effort to name a peak for Carl
Sharsmith at least since 1976. Other organizations stating
their support include the Bristlecone Chapter of the
California Native Plant Society, the Mono County Board
of Supervisors, Sierra Nature Notes, Mono Lake Committee,
Upper Merced River Watershed Council, and the Yosemite
Historical Society. The office of the Superintendent
of Yosemite National Park has in the past supported
the proposal. Statements have been gathered and are
posted on the website www.name4carl.org and originals
of same are being transmitted physically to the board
at this time. Additionally, other individuals have said
they have forwarded their own letters of support.
Proposed By Name: Name4Carl Committee
Street: 0637 Blue Ridge Road
City, State and Zip: Silverthorne, CO 80498
Email:
email
Telephone: 970/468-7673
Fax Number: 970/468-7673
Title: William R Jones, Lead Member
Company or Agency: Name4Carl Committee
Submitted By Name: William R Jones
Street: 0637 Blue Ridge Road
City, State and Zip: Silverthorne, CO 80498
Email:
email
Telephone: 970/468-7673
Fax Number: 970/468-7673
Title: Lead Member
Company or Agency: Name4Carl Committee
Do you have additional materials to submit?: Yes
A PRELIMINARY SUBMISSIONThe text below appears on the Board on
Geographic Names website under Quarterly Review List 392 released 06/27/2006:
Sharsmith Peak: summit, elevation 3,658 m (12,002 ft); in
Yosemite National Park/Yosemite Wilderness and Inyo National Forest, in the Sierra Nevada, just
E of Skelton Lakes, 4 km (2.5 mi) NW of Tioga Pass; named for Dr. Carl W. Sharsmith (1903-1994),
Yosemite National Park ranger-naturalist and alpine botanist; Tuolumne County and Mono County, California;
Sec 14, T1N, R24E, Mount Diablo Mer.; 37°56’12”N, 119°17’37”W; USGS map – Tioga Pass 1:24,000.
http://www.topozone.com/map.asp?z=11&n=4201257.94%20&e=298442.91&u=6&datum=nad83
Proposal: to make official a commemorative name in local use
Map: USGS Tioga Pass 1:24,000
Proponent: George Durkee; Twain Harte, CA
Administrative area: Yosemite National Park and Inyo National
Forest
Previous BGN Action: None
Names associated with feature: GNIS: No record
Local Usage: Sharsmith Peak (Yosemite Association web diary,
2003)
Published: Sharsmith Peak (Yosemite Outdoor Adventures, 2002)
Case Summary: This proposal is to make official the name
Sharsmith Peak for a 3,658 m (12,002 ft) high summit in the Sierra Nevada, just northwest of Tioga Pass and 19
km (12 mi) west of Mono Lake. The summit also lies along the boundary between Yosemite National
Park and Inyo National Forest, and on the boundary between Tuolumne County and Mono County. The
National Park side of the peak is designated as the Yosemite Wilderness, while the National Forest
portion is within the Harvey Monroe Hall Natural Research Area. The proponent, a ranger at
Sequoia-Kings Canyon National Parks and editor of
Sierra Nature
Notes, “an online journal of natural history news in the Sierra Nevada,”
reports that the proposed name has come into local use over the past few years.
The name would honor Dr. Carl W. Sharsmith (1903-1994), who was a Yosemite National Park
ranger-naturalist and alpine botanist, and at the time of his death, the oldest and longest serving National
Park Service interpretive ranger. Dr. Sharsmith was featured in many books, magazine articles, and
film documentaries about Yosemite. In addition, he created a 15,000-sheet herbarium at San Jose State
University where he had taught and was Professor Emeritus; this collection, consisting largely of
California native plants, is named the Carl W. Sharsmith Herbarium. In 1956, the Department of the Interior
bestowed its Meritorious Service Award on Dr. Sharsmith. The proponent reports that the proposed name
has come into recent local use, particularly among local hiking guides; the name also appeared
in the Yosemite Association’s
Outdoor Adventures brochure published in 2002. One hiking website
refers to the summit as “Carl Sharsmith Peak.” The proponent has developed a website dedicated to this
naming effort (http://www.name4carl.org/),
at which he outlines his reasons why the name warrants an exception to the Wilderness Naming Policy. He suggests the name provides a
means for educating Park visitors about the honoree’s significance to the area, and also that the
proposal “will serve to continue inspiration of sound research and accordingly-designed management programs that
will help ensure the natural character of the region.” He also provides an extensive list of
individuals and offices that support this proposal, including the late Dr. Dallas Peck, former director of
the U.S. Geological Survey; Dr. N. King Huber, USGS Geologist Emeritus; Roger O. Kennedy, former
National Park Service Director (1993-1997); several former Yosemite National Park Superintendents,
naturalists, and Park rangers; the Yosemite Museum Curator; the Yosemite Association; Elizabeth
Stone O’Neil, the author of Dr. Sharsmith’s biography; and a former Board member of the Eastern
Sierra Interpretive Association.
This "Proposal Form" page last modified
05/29/2007
\name4carl\n4cprop.htm.
Home &
Synopsis/Status Reports
Purpose & Method Who was Carl
Sharsmith?
Why name a Yosemite feature for Carl?/Origin of Proposal
Which feature should be named for Carl?
HOW CAN A FEATURE BE NAMED FOR CARL?
Summary of Supporting
Statements Contacts/Resources Webmaster
Search Form