Rachel Carson Homestead
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    • Challenge Resources
    • screening-room
  • Contact
    • Calendar
  • Visit
  • Connect
    • Anniversary of Rachel’s Birthday 2024
  • Opportunities Offered
  • Paver FAQ
  • Unofficial – local restaurants and catering
Rachel Carson Homestead
  • Home
  • About
    • Mission Vision and Values
    • RCHA History
    • Board and Policies
    • Interpretive Framework
    • Internet Privacy Policy
  • Your Tribute – Help Pave the Way!
  • Rachel’s Cottage Visit
    • Cottage Visitor Testimonials
  • Your Tribute
    • Piano in Carson Parlor
  • Donate
  • Other ways to help
    • Become a Member
    • Volunteer
  • Resources
    • Biography
    • Books by Rachel Carson
    • Books about Rachel Carson
    • Environmental Reading List
    • Legacy Challenge
    • Legacy Challenge Commitments
    • Top 10 Challenge
    • Challenge Resources
    • screening-room
  • Contact
    • Calendar
  • Visit
  • Connect
    • Anniversary of Rachel’s Birthday 2024
  • Opportunities Offered
  • Paver FAQ
  • Unofficial – local restaurants and catering
  • Home
  • Resources

Resources

The Rachel Carson Legacy

Rachel Carson, a child of the Allegheny Valley, was a writer and an ecologist. There have been great writers whose descriptions of natural history and stories of the natural world charm and delight readers; and there have been scientists whose work excites the public attention. Rachel Carson rises to a heroic stature because her conscience called for action, not only words.

Rachel Carson was intimately familiar with the natural systems she observed closely from childhood, and studied intensely as an ecologist. She recognized the potential for human activity to disrupt the fragile, complex, and wondrous web of life. She dared to point out, in a time when technology was all the rage, that people are PART of the web of life. Man-made poisons introduced into natural systems can harm not only nature, but people as well. She dared to point out that chemical solutions to biological problems need to be balanced with the total long term, life cycle cost.

Rachel Carson was reasonable in her proposals. She did not insist on radical changes. She pleaded for precaution against irreversible damages. She urged study and consideration of safer alternatives.

Her legacy to this and future generations is guided by her environmental ethic:

  • HABITAT
    • Preserve and learn from natural places
  • HARMONY
    • Live in harmony with nature
    • Recognize “Man in the Stream of Time”
      • Minimize the impact of man-made chemicals on natural systems of the world
  • HUMILITY
    • Respect that the balance of nature  is not centered on man
      • Consider the implications of human activities on the global web of life.

“I am not afraid of being thought a sentimentalist when I say that I believe natural beauty has a necessary place in the spiritual development of any individual or any society. I believe that whenever we destroy beauty, or whenever we substitute something man-made and artificial for a natural feature of the earth, we have retarded some part of man’s spiritual growth…”

– Rachel Carson,
From “A Statement of Belief” in The House of Life (Brooks)

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