Dale Matson
The early-recorded exploration and courageous efforts
in the Sierra Nevada are populated with names like Muir, King, Solomons, Brewer
and iconic landmarks bear their names as a tribute to their presence and descriptive
reports. Their accounts not only provided geological and geographic data, their
journals beckoned others to explore the trails, passes, basins and peaks of what John Muir called “The Range Of Light”. Their experiences in the Sierra
Nevada transformed them and in reading their accounts we too became captivated,
inspired and became pilgrims ourselves.
There are two more contemporary men of the Sierra. Norman
Clyde was an amazing mountaineer with the most first ascents of the Sierra
peaks. A spire in the Minarets, a peak in the Palisades and a Glacier bear his
name. There is another individual who was the first to ski the John Muir Trail
including ascending Mt. Whitney in 1928.
Bartholomew knew the Sierra as you would know your own back
yard. He was familiar via his work as a
stream guager for Southern California Edison. He was a mountain man made by
trade and a mountain man at heart. He carefully planned his winter ski by
placing catches of food and supplies along the route the summer before. This
successful 300 mile unaccompanied and unsupported journey was monumental in
scope and heroic in effort.
Gene Rose a writer for the Fresno Bee recorded his effort
and life in the book High Odyssey (1974). http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=gene+rose+orland+bartholomew
There was an effort made to name a mountain peak after
Bartholomew in 2004 and the Los Angeles Times had an article about this. http://articles.latimes.com/2004/apr/24/opinion/ed-bart24
There is also an excellent background post by William Tweed,
former Superintendent of SeKi here: http://www.sequoiaparksfoundation.org/2012/historic-people-and-places-orland-bartholomew/
The request was made to the U. S. Bureau of Geographic Names
(BGN) and an exception was not granted because of the policy that the spire to
bear his name was in the Ansel Adams Wilderness. The spirit of the Wilderness
Act of 1964 was a “leave no trace” policy and this included naming locations. I received an email from the BGN stating the
following: “There was a proposal submitted by Orlando Bartholomew's son to name
a summit along the Ritter Range in the Sierra National Forest/Ansel Adams
Wilderness. The proposal was not supported by the California Advisory Committee
on Geographic Names and the U.S. Forest Service both citing a lack of evidence
that naming the feature warrants an exception to the Board on Geographic Names'
Wilderness Policy. Policies used by the BGN may be found at:
http://geonames.usgs.gov, click on Domestic Names and then Principles,
Policies, and Procedures. The minutes from the meeting where the proposal was
discussed may be found under Minutes. Click on the 669th Meeting, located on
page 5.”
Maria McCormick from the BGN was also encouraging and wrote
that I could re-submit Bartholomew’s name for another feature in a non-wilderness
area, which would be less of a hurdle. I have offered an unnamed peak in the Sierra National Forest
South of Huntington Lake and am in the middle of the nominating process. To me,
it is an honor to submit Orland Bartholomew’s name.