Robert Marshall was an American forester, writer and wilderness activist. He spearheaded the 1935 founding of the Wilderness Society in the United States. He died of heart failure at the age of 38 in 1939. Several areas and landmarks, including The Bob Marshall Wilderness in Montana and Mount Marshall in the Adirondacks, are named in his honor.
About Bob Marshall (wilderness activist) in brief

In 1935, he was one of the principal founders of The Wilderness Society and personally provided most of the Society’s funding in its first years. In 1936, he helped gain passage of the wilderness Act of 1964, which legally defined wilderness areas of the U.S. and protected 9 million acres of federal lands from development and road building. In 1939, Marshall died ofHeart failure at age 38. He had started his outdoor career in 1925 as forester with the Forest Service. He later held two significant public appointed posts: chief of forestry in the Bureau of Indian Affairs, from 1933 to 1937, and head of recreation management in the Forest Service, from 1937 to 1939, both during the administration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. His younger brother George later described the family’s visits to Knollwood, their summer camp on Lower SaranAC Lake in theAdirondack State Park, as a time when they “entered a world of freedom and informality, of living plants and spaces, of fresh greens and blue blues, of giant, slender pines and delicate pink twin deer, and tramps of boats and trampers” He was drawn to the outdoors as a young child; two of his childhood heroes were Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, who explored the Louisiana Purchase in the Lewis and Clark Expedition. After that, Marshall returned often on his own. He wrote numerous articles and books about his travels, including Arctic Village.
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