Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Environmental Leader and Innovator | Page 4

Better than Yosemite? Mount Auburn from the Perspective of Environmental History By Aaron Sachs M ost often we think of cemeteries as important cultural institutions where we preserve memories of our loved ones, where we show our com- mitment not to forget. Places like Mount Auburn capture a sense of dedication and seriousness, suggesting that there are still some checks against American superficiality. But Mount Auburn is also deeply significant as an environmental institution. Of course, for certain kinds of people—horticulturists, landscape architects, and birders, for instance— Mount Auburn has always had an obvious appeal. But most Americans, broadly speaking, are actually not Landscape enthusiasts; what we tend to like is Wilderness. When we enter the environmental mode, we think of mountains, cliffs, waterfalls, and Sierra Club calendars. Our visual imagination probably takes us out West, to the Grand Canyon, Yellowstone, and Yosemite. We think of America’s Best Idea, as Ken Burns called it in his recent PBS docu- mentary about our national parks. If you care about the environment, you care about preserving its wildest aspects— and you don’t necessarily spend much time thinking about the natural world as it exists in cities, or as it has been shaped by designers. 2 | Sweet Auburn For 150 years, since Congress granted Yosemite Valley to California as a new kind of park, “for public use, resort, and recreation,” the national parks have been our iconic environments, the kinds of places we are meant to value— and consequently they have had a huge impact on the way we conceive of environmental politics. They are without question stunningly beautiful places, but they are also places of denial—places far removed from our daily lives and patterns of consumption and pollution. They are places we visit, temporarily, on vacation, places outside history and even culture, timeless places that supposedly have never changed and should never change. In a way, they tell us that everything will be okay—that we can keep living the way we’ve been living. Just make sure to guard the gems. But environmental thought and environmental politics were very different three decades before the Civil War, when Mount Auburn was founded. This older landscape tradition may have been eclipsed in our culture by the wilderness tradition, but I think it represents values that could be ex- tremely useful to us today in rethinking our environmental problems. Antebellum landscapes emphasized not seperateness and sublime uplift, breathtaking beauty and timelessness— but rather values like commonality; limitation; adaptation; integration; and our inevitable anchoring in history, in