Posted by Gavin Robertson on November 23, 2007No CommentsPrinter Friendly

Tribute to an organic pioneer - Rachel Carson

Time Magazine included her amongst the hundred most important figures of the twentieth century and there wouldn’t be many organic gardeners or producers who fail to recognise her contribution to their cause. Her research skills and clear writing style alerted a wider audience to the environmental implications of chemical based agriculture.

Rachel Louise Carson was born in Springdale, Pennsylvania in 1907 and demonstrated an early interest in nature, literature, and the arts. She commenced college as an English Major but was encouraged to change to Zoology after taking an introductory course in Biological Science. She earned her Masters degree in Zoology then undertook teaching duties in Maryland. Summer vacations involved further studies at the Marine Biological Laboratories in Massachusetts. When the opportunity arose, Carson demonstrated her profound gift for communicating science to a general audience. The Bureau of Fisheries commissioned her to write a series of radio broadcasts based on fish biology and aquatic life. In recognition of her ability, Carson was subsequently hired as an aquatic biologist where she combined her research and publishing interests.

Early essays on ocean life attracted immediate attention from newspapers and journals throughout the country. Her first major work Under the Sea Wind was published by Simon & Schuster in 1941. It received excellent reviews yet struggled to sell sufficient copies. During the next few years, Carson continued to develop her research skills and to write many articles on a range of topics. By 1945, Carson encountered preliminary details of DDT, a revolutionary new pesticide which was set to transform agricultural practice. While she attempted to generate some interest in the potential hazards of this chemical, it wasn’t until much later that publishers became significantly interested in her cause. Commercial publishing success was achieved in 1951 with The Sea Around us which sold sufficiently well to enable her to devote herself more effectively to writing.

During the 1950’s the dependence on chemical pesticides was exposed through a series of disturbing events. These included mosquito control campaigns which decimated bird populations, in addition to chemical assaults against the fire ant, gypsy moth and other insect pests. In each case the consequences of chemical control appeared significantly less appealing than the original problem. In tandem with her analysis of insecticide experiments near her own home, Carson began compiling a convincing thesis against the practicality of indiscriminate chemical controls.

Silent Spring was published in 1962, initially presented in serialized format for the New Yorker. This assured a large audience for her controversial and politically sensitive subject matter. In hindsight, the success of her work was not necessarily linked to being the first voice. While others warned on the dangers of pesticide use with equal coherence, there were few writers who could match the sincerity of conviction combined with her poetic and often haunting use of metaphor. …it was a spring without voices. On the mornings that had once throbbed with the dawn chorus of scores of bird voices there was now no sound; only silence lay over the fields and woods and marsh.

Rachel Carson died in 1964 but is assured a permanent place as the principal founder of the modern environmental movement. She provided the foundation of a scientific and poetic justification for those organic gardeners and producers who refuse to compromise with chemical inputs.

For those of you who’d like to join with others in celebrating Rachel Carson’s significant literary and scientific contributions, please visit the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Rachel Carson Centennial Blog. The most recent post on the Centennial Blog considers those special gifts that might invite a child to investigate the innards of a walnut shell, hunt for fossils, or wonder at the fragile strength of a Daddy Long Legs. Thoughtful and inspired - well worth a visit!

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