‘Thomas Moran’s Yellowstone’ opens soon at National Museum of Wildlife Art

Thomas Moran (England, 1837–1926), ‘Hot Springs of Gardiner's River, Yellowstone Park,’ 1871. Watercolor and graphite on paper. 9 7/8 by 13in. On loan from the Yellowstone Heritage and Research Center.
Thomas Moran (England, 1837–1926), ‘Hot Springs of Gardiner's River, Yellowstone Park,’ 1871. Watercolor and graphite on paper. 9 7/8 by 13in. On loan from the Yellowstone Heritage and Research Center.
Thomas Moran (England, 1837–1926), ‘Hot Springs of Gardiner’s River, Yellowstone Park,’ 1871. Watercolor and graphite on paper. 9 7/8 by 13in. On loan from the Yellowstone Heritage and Research Center.

JACKSON, Wyo. –  On May 14, the National Museum of Wildlife Art (NMWA) will open Scenes of Transcendent Beauty: Thomas Moran’s Yellowstone, an exhibition celebrating Yellowstone National Park’s 150th anniversary this year. The exhibition will be on view through August 23.

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‘Saving Yellowstone’ chronicles origins of America’s first national park

On March 1, Scribner will release Saving Yellowstone: Exploration and Preservation in Reconstruction America by historian Megan Kate Nelson, which explores how the country’s first national park came to be. Image courtesy of Scribner
On March 1, Scribner will release Saving Yellowstone: Exploration and Preservation in Reconstruction America by historian Megan Kate Nelson, which explores how the country’s first national park came to be. Image courtesy of Scribner
On March 1, Scribner will release Saving Yellowstone: Exploration and Preservation in Reconstruction America by historian Megan Kate Nelson, which explores how the country’s first national park came to be. Image courtesy of Scribner

NEW YORK — Each year, nearly four million people visit Yellowstone National Park — one of the most popular of all national parks — but few know the fascinating and complex historical context in which it was established. Vividly narrated and illuminating, Saving Yellowstone: Exploration and Preservation in Reconstruction America (Scribner; on sale
March 1) by historian Megan Kate Nelson (author of the Pulitzer Prize Finalist The Three-Cornered War) shines a light on the creation of our first national park, and makes clear how frequently the grandest goals of our country precipitate the suffering and subjugation of many who called this land home, and how our most progressive visions can be warped by the reality of the American project.

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