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by William E. Colby
I first met Edward Taylor Parsons in the fall of 1900. Learning that I was Secretary of
the Sierra Club, he called at my office in San Francisco with a letter from the Mazama
Club, stating that he was interested in mountaineering, and since he expected to spend
considerable time in California he wished to join the Sierra Club. From that day an
unusually close and intimate friendship sprang up between us.
Inspired by what the Mazamas had accomplished, I had already proposed to the Board of
Directors the plan of conducting annual outings under the auspices of the Sierra Club and
in conjunction with the Club work. This proposal had been reluctantly indorsed by the
Board, as some of the Directors had doubts as to the success of the plan, and authority to
conduct the initial outing in the summer of 1901 had been granted. There was considerable
inertia to overcome and innumerable problems to be solved in this venture. Mr. Parsons
arrived on the scene at the critical time. The frontispiece pictures him at this period,
in the prime of his life, possessed of tireless energy and enthusiasm. His experience
gained on the Mazama trips proved invaluable and I had him added to the Outing Committee
as my chief assistant.
It is impossible to describe adequately the debt the Club owes to Mr. Parsons, or for
that matter which I owe him personally, for his aid and wise counsel during these early
outings when we were breaking ground and overcoming the multitude of difficulties that
were encountered. He was ever ready to accept responsibility and proved especially helpful
in the organization and leadership of side trips and mountain climbs. He was alert to
guard against possibility of accident, and while some felt that his caution in this
respect was excessive, doubtless there are many who joined in these expeditions who have
him to thank for avoidance of accident which his extreme care and foresight averted.
The Sierra Club meant more to Mr. Parsons than it can possibly mean to all but a very
few. It filled a distinct place in his life and became a vital part of his existence. This
was due to his inherited character and clean, strong personality. His years of continuous
travel all over the United States in the interest of the company he so efficiently
represented had not the slightest effect as it does with many, of breaking down and
lowering the high mental and moral standards he had acquired in his youth and during his
university career. The better things in life continued to interest him with undiminished
force. His taste for the best literature was an ever-present source of enjoyment, and
because of his fondness for "God's out-of-doors," he joined in the early Mazama
expeditions, heart and soul. The ideals of the Sierra Club, the inspiration of its
leaders, John Muir, Joseph LeConte, and others, as well as the delightful summer outings
in the hospitable Sierra, made the strongest kind of appeal to him and satisfied the
higher longings of his nature. It was on these outings that he met the girl he chose for
his wife, and her interest in all these same ideals and their similar literary tastes made
their married life one of enviable harmony.
His devotion to the Club was most strongly evidenced by his untiring labor in
connection with the Sierra Club publications. No amount of time-consuming drudgery such as
the revision of copy, proof-reading, or supervision of mechanical details of the printing,
caused him to shirk a task whose only compensation was the personal satisfaction of having
done a good work faithfully and well, and which, because of its nature, was fully
appreciated by only the very few who labored with him. Seldom is a Club so fortunate as to
have a man of such splendid character and intellectual attainments so thoroughly devoted
to its welfare, and who gave so freely and generously of his time to promote its cause.
The Sierra Club and all his friends have suffered a loss that cannot be measured.
As a tribute to his devotion to the Club his friends have started a subscription known
as the "Parsons Memorial Fund," and the response has been so generous that
nearly a thousand dollars has already been subscribed. This fund will be used for the
erection of an appropriate memorial. It has been decided that this shall be a building or
lodge of stone and as large as the fund will justify, to be erected on the Soda Springs
property in the Tuolumne Meadows, which is now controlled by the Club. This will be a
single room containing a large fireplace and will sere as a permanent Club headquarters
and meeting place in that region. In this manner will Mr. Parson's usefulness and devotion
to the Club be suitably perpetuated.
It will interest Club members to learn that his wife, Marion
Randall Parsons, has been elected a Director of the Club by the remaining members of
the Board. Her devotion to the interests of the Club has been such that it seems
particularly appropriate that she should have been selected to aid in carrying forward the
work which meant so much to Mr. Parsons.
Source: Sierra Club Bulletin. Vol. IX, No. 4, January, 1915.
For more about Edward Taylor Parsons:
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