Observing 50 years of enduring stewardship for the planet
More than 100,000 people marched in New York City on the first Earth Day in 1970, the event’s largest U.S. gathering that year.
IN MANY WAYS, Earth Day was born in the muck of an oil spill. After an oil-well blowout offshore from Santa Barbara caused devastation along the California coast in 1969, U.S. Senator Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin worked with environmentalist Denis Hayes to organize and launch the first Earth Day on April 22, 1970—an event that drew some 20 million people into the streets from New York to San Francisco. And so began a new conservation movement, with an emphasis on “human health and the environment,” says Earth Day Network President Kathleen Rogers. Over time, the Earth Day celebration has become an international movement, inspiring the creation of scores of environmental groups and prompting legislation to protect the Earth.
Annual posters promoting Earth Day have featured famous artists such as Peter Max (above left) and Ivan Chermayeff (right), and also have urged action on behalf of the planet.
Joshua Rapp Learn wrote about whooping cranes in our February-March 2020 issue.
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