Mountains So Sublime

Nineteenth-Century British Travellers and the Lure of the Rocky Mountain West

By Terry Abraham
Categories: Environmental & Nature Studies, Regional & Cultural Studies, Canadian Studies
Publisher: University of Calgary Press
Paperback : 9781552381816, 248 pages, May 2006
Ebook (PDF) : 9781552384084, 248 pages, May 2006

Table of contents

Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments

First View of the Rockies
Mountains as Metaphor
Travel Accounts for the Armchair
Rails from Trails

British Travellers and Their Baggage
On the Boundary
Financing the West
Tourists and Sightseers
Sports and Sportsmen
In the News

Fellow Travellers
Isn't She a Daisy?
Grateful Mountain Feeling
So Vast its Size
Standing Upon the Mountaintop
Boulder and Keener Contours

The Post-Picturesque Landscape
From the Picturesque to the Sublime
The Observer as Artist
The Artist as Observer

"This Sublime Chaos:" The Rocky Mountain Wilderness
Everlasting Sentinels
Valleys and Parks
Deep, Vast Canyons
So Great a River
A Lake Smooth as a Mirror
Primeval Forest
Unpeopled Prairies
Atmospheric Conditions

Anglo-American Attitudes
The American Dominion
What's Mine is Mined
TIMBER!
The Game is Up
Wanton Vandalism
Appreciative Attitudes

Lost Landscapes: British Travellers and the Far West
The British Traveller
The Opening of the West
Fashionable and Unique
Proto-Conservationists
The Traveller's Contribution

Notes
Bibliography
Index

Description

"Picturesque," "immense," "fantastic," and "sublime" are a few of the ways early British travellers described the landscape of the Rocky Mountains and the surrounding terrain. As part of a long tradition of British travellers' tales, these tourists - explorers, sportsmen, writers, scientists, artists, missionaries, and merchants - sought ways to describe the vastness and strangeness of the North American landscape to a British audience. Using their published and unpublished accounts as source material, Mountains So Sublime : Nineteenth-Century British Travellers and the Lure of the Rocky Mountain West, weaves their observations, their aesthetic, and their 'Britishness' into a unique view of a nearly vanished West. Attempting to make their West real to their readers, these travellers encouraged the growing realization that North American scenery was a unique aspect of the world's natural heritage. Many travellers also sought to convey the changes brought by an onrushing progress. The British were among those who cautioned against excessive human encroachment on the landscape, demonstrating what might be called "environmental pre-awareness." Today's readers will discover perhaps surprising parallels between modern environmental and conservation issues and the concerns expressed by these early travellers.

Reviews

Mountains So Sublime is a beautifully designed book . . . The range of primary sources collected in this attractive book suggest Abraham's talent as an archivist.

—Teresa Heffernan, University of Toronto Quarterly

Mountains So Sublime is a thoughtful study of the reactions of Victorian British travellers to the Rocky Mountain West . . . engagingly written, well illustrated, and an interesting and enjoyable read.

Because of its exquisite design, heavy paper, and beautiful illustrations, simply handling this book [provides] far more pleasure than the usual academic text . . . Mountains So Sublime is an enjoyable introduction to an engaging body of texts that have much to tell us and that deserve to be better known.

—Monica Rico, Pacific Historical Review