Archives West Finding Aid
Table of Contents
Mike Clark papers, 1972-2017
Overview of the Collection
- Creator
- Clark, Michael S.
- Title
- Mike Clark papers
- Dates
- 1972-2017 (inclusive)19722017
- Quantity
- 11 linear feet
- Collection Number
- 2628
- Summary
- The Mike Clark papers document his activities from his first involvement with the Highlander Center in 1972 through his work as a private consultant in 2017. Among the organizations Clark worked for that are documented are the Greater Yellowstone Coalition, Greenpeace US, Trout Unlimited, Yellowstone Heritage, Friends of the Earth US, Northern Lights Institute, Environmental Policy Institute, and the Highlander Center.
- Repository
-
Montana State University Library, Merrill G. Burlingame Special Collections
Montana State University-Bozeman Library
Merrill G Burlingame Special Collections
P.O. Box 173320
Bozeman, MT
59717-3320
Telephone: 4069944242
Fax: 4069942851
- Access Restrictions
-
This collection is open for research.
- Languages
Biographical NoteReturn to Top
Mike Clark, was born September 12, 1945 in Durham, North Carolina and raised on his ancestral mountain farm in western North Carolina. He was among the first in his family to attend college and graduated from Berea College Kentucky in 1967 with a bachelor's degree in English. He began working as a photojournalist for a weekly newspaper in eastern Kentucky, the Mountain Eagle, and as an educator and organizer – and, later, president – at Highlander Center, a school for activists in Tennessee. In the early 1980s, he accepted a position based in Helena at the Northern Lights Institute, a regional research center operating in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming. In the mid-1980s, he moved to Colorado to work as an independent consultant to numerous grassroots organizations and private foundations throughout the West, and then later to Washington, D.C., where he served as president of the Environmental Policy Institute, the nation's first professional environmental lobby firm. In the late 1980s, he was named president of the global environmental advocacy group Friends of the Earth U.S. Several other positions in Washington, D.C., followed, and then, in 1994, he moved to Bozeman, Montana to accept a position as executive director of the Greater Yellowstone Coalition. During his first six years at the helm of the environmental advocacy group, the organization's budget more than doubled, and the coalition expanded its capacity to work on issues affecting both private and public lands within the greater Yellowstone ecosystem. Clark's most noteworthy achievement while serving as director at the GYC was brokering with the federal government and the Noranda corporation the 1996 deal that withdrew the New World District on Yellowstone National Park's northern boundary from any mining activity. Clark stepped down as leader of the GYC in 2001 to pursue other projects in the region, including an effort to preserve ranchlands in the greater Yellowstone ecosystem, work on water management through Trout Unlimited and private consulting projects. In 2009 and 2014, he fulfilled four- and five-month appointments as interim executive director of Greenpeace USA, and he returned, from 2009-2013, for a second stint as executive director of the GYC. He has served on over 20 non-profit boards. Clark is currently working as a consultant and on several book projects.
Content DescriptionReturn to Top
The Mike Clark papers document his activities from his first involvement with the Highlander Center in 1972 through his work as a private consultant in 2017. Among the organizations Clark worked for that are documented are the Greater Yellowstone Coalition, Greenpeace US, Trout Unlimited, Yellowstone Heritage, Friends of the Earth US, Northern Lights Institute, Environmental Policy Institute, and the Highlander Center. The collection has been divided into nine series based on document type or subject: journals and notebooks; speeches, articles and clippings; Highlander Center; Northern Lights Institute; New World Mining District Battle; Yellowstone Land Ownership Survey; Crown of the Continent Report; General Research Files; Visual Materials.
Administrative InformationReturn to Top
Arrangement
Series 1 Journals and notebooks
Series 2 Speeches, articles, and clippings
Series 3 Highlander Center
Series 4 Northern Lights Institute
Series 5 New World Mining District battle records
Series 6 Yellowstone Land Ownership Study
Series 7 Crown of the Continent report
Series 8 General research files
Series 9 Visual Objects
Acquisition Information
Journals, notebooks, correspondence, topical files, photographs, and other materials created or collected by Mike Clark of Bozeman, Montana were donated by him to the Montana State University Library on November 16, 2017.
Processing Note
This collection was processed 2018 June 21
Detailed Description of the CollectionReturn to Top
1: Journals and notebooksReturn to Top
Large and small format daybook type dairies that document the ongoing activities of Clark as he progressed in his career. Covering the period from his first association with the Highlander Center of New Market, Tennessee through his tenure as the interim director of Greenpeace US, these volumes contain brief notations of meetings, "to-do" lists, contact information, thoughts, and travel itineraries. Much of the content appears to be randomly assembled, and while an attempt has been made to put the volumes into strict chronological order it is not always possible. Clark sometimes recycled journals with unused pages so the chronology is mixed up. The dates listed for each volume represent the earliest and last verified dates written within, and the possibility that notations precede or follow those dates in any given volume should be understood. Volumes 1-50 are larger format, while volumes 51 through 86 are smaller, pocket memoranda book size. These items have been arranged in general chronological order.
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | Volume | ||
1 | 1 |
Jumbled papers
|
1972-1975 |
1 | 2 |
Highlander
|
January 7-December 23, 1974 |
1 | 3 | January 14, 1975-March 23, 1978 | |
1 | 4 | July 19, 1978-January 19, 1979 | |
1 | 5 |
Highlander
|
October 16, 1979-April 26, 1980 |
1 | 6 |
Highlander
|
May 19, 1980-April 21, 1981 |
1 | 7 | February 28-December 30, 1982 | |
1 | 8 | February 1-June 21, 1983 | |
1 | 9 |
NLI
|
June 1, 1983-January 4, 1984 |
1 | 10 | September 1-May 3, 1984 | |
1 | 11 | January 9-June 26, 1985 | |
1 | 12 | September 22, 1985-January 3, 1986 | |
1 | 13 | January 2-May 23, 1986 | |
1 | 14 | December 17, 1986-April 24, 1987 | |
1 | 15 | April 28, 1987-January 15, 1988 | |
1 | 16 | January 13-April 29, 1988 | |
1 | 17 | June 1-December 20, 1988 | |
2 | 18 | December 22, 1988-September 23, 1989 | |
2 | 19 | October 1, 1989-May 4, 1990 | |
2 | 20 | May 7-December 18, 1990 | |
2 | 21 | February 2-October 22, 1991 | |
2 | 22 | October 23, 1991-February 20, 1992 | |
2 | 23 | May 15, 1992-January 28, 1993 | |
2 | 24 | December 1, 1992-April 19, 1993 | |
2 | 25 | September 1, 1993-April 16, 1994 | |
2 | 26 | November 24, 1994-May 2, 1995 | |
2 | 27 | November 20, 1995-June 8, 1996 | |
2 | 28 | May 10, 1995-June 30, 1996 | |
2 | 29 | July 28-November 4, 1996 | |
2 | 30 | March 22-October 13, 1997 | |
2 | 31 | January 2-March 3, 1998 | |
2 | 32 | June 25, 1997-February 27, 1999 | |
2 | 33 | April 29, 1999-January 13, 2000 | |
2 | 34 | January 15-July 26, 2001 | |
2 | 35 | July 10-November 15, 2001 | |
2 | 36 | November 19, 2001-July 26, 2002 | |
2 | 37 | September 4, 2002-February 21, 2003 | |
2 | 38 | April 15-September 27, 2003 | |
2 | 39 | March 13-October 10, 2003 | |
2 | 40 | September 28, 2003-March 3, 2004 | |
2 | 41 | January 26, 2004- | |
2 | 42 |
Kenya
|
March-May 3, 2004 |
2 | 43 | April 1-December 29, 2004 | |
2 | 44 | January 13-December 11, 2005 | |
2 | 45 | April 24-June 21, 2006 | |
2 | 46 |
GYC
|
June 23, 2006-June 12, 2007 |
2 | 47 | December 1, 2005-December 13, 2007 | |
2 | 48 | January-December 9, 2008 | |
2 | 49 |
GYC
|
April 20, 2014-May 5, 2015 |
2 | 50 | undated | |
3 | 51 | January 28-May 4, 2004 | |
3 | 52 | May 4-October 1, 2004 | |
3 | 53 | October 1, 2004- June 2, 2005 | |
3 | 54 | May-October 10, 2005 | |
3 | 55 | September 11, 2005-January 11, 2006 | |
3 | 56 | November 30, 2005-August 22, 2006 | |
3 | 57 | October 2006-September 24, 2007 | |
3 | 58 | October 2007-November 2008 | |
3 | 59 | December 2007-November 2008 | |
3 | 60 | December 2007-March 26, 2008 | |
3 | 61 | August 30, 2007-May 15, 2008 | |
3 | 62 | February 8-April 10, 2008 | |
3 | 63 | November 13, 2008-March 20, 2009 | |
3 | 64 | March 7, 2009 | |
3 | 65 | March–May 14, 2009 | |
3 | 66 | July-October 2009 | |
3 | 67 | May 20-July 13, 2009 | |
4 | 68 | August-December 2009 | |
4 | 69 | January-April 12, 2010 | |
4 | 70 | February 24-July 27, 2010 | |
4 | 71 | July-September 29, 2010 | |
4 | 72 | October 10-December 30, 2010 | |
4 | 73 | January 9-March 13, 2011 | |
4 | 74 | June 16-September 30, 2011 | |
4 | 75 | January 14-July 5, 2012 | |
4 | 76 | February 17-November 5, 2012 | |
4 | 77 | September 11-November 27, 2012 | |
4 | 78 | November 30, 2012-March 6, 2013 | |
4 | 79 | May 2013-January 21, 2014 | |
4 | 80 | June 14, 2013-July 21, 2014 | |
4 | 81 | April 14-June 5, 2014 | |
4 | 82 | February 23-September 18, 2015 | |
4 | 83 | undated | |
4 | 84 | undated | |
4 | 85 | undated | |
4 | 86 | undated |
2: Speeches, articles, and clippingsReturn to Top
During his lengthy career, Clark wrote numerous essays on topics which concerned him, and delivered addresses to various groups that he led, or had been invited to speak to. This series presents a collection of these essays and speeches, along with articles written about Clark and his activities, and arranged in alphabetical order. Other essays and reports pertaining to specific organizations can be found in the appropriate series.
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | Folder | ||
5 | 1 | American Forest Resource Council meeting, Trimble, Ohio |
June 2002 |
5 | 2 | Alaska Rain Forest Campaign |
|
5 | 3 | Annual Meeting, GYC Chair opening speech |
1999 |
5 | 4 | Army Mammoth
(Commemorating Cavalry Role in YNP)
|
|
5 | 5 | Assessing Democratic Behavior |
|
5 | 6 | Berea College - Education and Exploitation |
1970-1973 |
5 | 7 | Berea College - March on Montgomery |
1965 |
5 | 8 |
Building an Ark
(Preserving Greater Yellowstone)
|
|
5 | 9 | C.U.T. Land Bomb Shelter |
|
5 | 10 | Caldera – unsuccessful proposal to the Ford Foundation to create a new regional institute |
|
5 | 11 | Cary Institute talk
(Millbrook, New York)
|
2011 November |
5 | 12 | Clark Diary
(Notes + Other Writings)
|
|
5 | 13 | Clark on Highlander Years Sowing on the Mountain |
1990 |
5 | 14 | Clark Short Story "Old Man Colburn" |
|
5 | 15 | Clark Talk |
2010 March |
5 | 16 |
Clark Talk
(GYC Farewell Address)
|
|
5 | 17 |
Clinton Visit
(New World Mine)
|
|
5 | 18 | Crown of Continent memo/report on creating a coordinating body of NGOs and government |
|
5 | 19 | David "Tater" Tatham Service
(Eulogy of Clark's youngest brother)
|
|
5 | 20 | David and Spike – report on attempt to create a moonshine co-op in East Tenn |
|
5 | 21 | Duke Oral History
(Mike Clark Interview)
|
|
5 | 22 | EPI Anniversary |
|
6 | 1 | EPI Quarterly Report |
|
6 | 2 | Everette Tharp - Miners Committee |
1966 |
6 | 3 | Friends of the Earth |
|
6 | 4 | Gish, Tom Memorial
(Publisher of Mountain Eagle, Whitesburg, Kentucky)
|
|
6 | 5 | Global Warming Workshop |
|
6 | 6 | Gray Bears
(Greater Yellowstone elders proposal)
|
|
6 | 7 | GYC Staff Party |
|
6 | 8 | Hewlett - North American West Meeting |
2007 November |
6 | 9 | Human Rights Watch Management Assessment Group |
|
6 | 10 | James C. Penny Foundation Evaluation |
|
6 | 11 | Jones Foundation
(Louisiana Wetlands Report)
|
(1993) |
6 | 12 | John Glen on Highlander |
|
6 | 13 | Julia's Thorne's Memorial Service |
2006 |
6 | 14 | Mack, Myrna, attempt to identify assassins of academic researcher in Guatemala |
|
6 | 15 | ||
6 | 16 | Nathan's Story – story of a child falling under a train in Boston's South Station |
|
6 | 17 | Newsletter
(Mike Clark Named Executive Director of GYC)
|
|
6 | 18 | Potomac Conservancy and Cacapon and Lost Rivers Land Trust |
|
6 | 19 | Racicot and Barry, memo on managing wild bison |
|
6 | 20 | Resurrection City, report on living within the tent city in Washington, DC |
in 1968 |
6 | 21 | Rocky Mountain Front |
|
6 | 22 | Seattle Institute |
|
6 | 23 | Sigurd Olson Memorial Lecture, Minneapolis |
|
6 | 24 | Steve Clark Memorial Service
(Mike Clark's twin brother)
|
|
6 | 25 | Western Waters Project |
|
6 | 26 | Yellowstone Heritage Trust memo |
|
6 | 27 | Windcall Week 92 |
|
6 | 28 | Women Miners - Coal Employment Project |
|
6 | 29 | Woodward Wickham Memorial Service |
|
6 | 30 | Yellowstone Institute Course |
|
6 | 31 | Yellowstone Heritage Trust - Articles on Ranches |
Series 3: Highlander CenterReturn to Top
Highlander is a school for activist dealing with civil rights, labor, anti-poverty and human rights concerns and environmental issues throughout Appalachia and the American south. Over its first forty years, Highlander was the most controversial school for adults in the southern United States because of its work with labor unions and civil rights groups. In 1972, Clark became president of the school and oversaw major programmatic transitions, shifting from work primarily with black activists into work with white Appalachians in order to create a national multi-racial coalition of poor people. These files represent materials created or collected by Mike Clark during his time with the Center, including those travel materials he gathered while visiting Europe in 1970 while working for the Center. They have been alphabetically arranged.
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | Folder | ||
6 | 32 | AGSLP
(Appalachian Group to Save the Land and People)
|
|
6 | 33 | AGSLP Resolution |
|
7 | 1 | Appalachian Alliance – organization responding to widespread 1977 Appalachian floods |
|
7 | 2 | Alliance Asst. |
June 1977 |
7 | 3 | Alliance Clark Memo |
1978 December 19 |
7 | 4 | Alliance Conference |
|
7 | 5 | Alliance Correspondence |
1979 |
7 | 6 | Alliance CUM-SAP Finances |
|
7 | 7 | Alliance Ed. Proposal |
|
7 | 8 | Alliance Energy |
|
7 | 9 | Alliance Energy Conference |
1977 |
7 | 10 | Alliance Energy Statement Conference |
|
7 | 11 | Alliance Funding Proposals |
|
7 | 12 | Alliance Land Task Force |
|
7 | 13 | Alliance Mailing List |
1980 |
7 | 14 | Alliance Media Workshop |
1977 July |
7 | 15 | Alliance Meeting |
1979 |
7 | 16 | Alliance Migrant P8 |
|
7 | 17 | Alliance Notes |
|
7 | 18 | Alliance Notes |
1971 July 23 |
7 | 19 | Alliance Pamphlet |
1978 |
7 | 20 | Alliance Press |
1978 February |
7 | 21 | Alliance Press Copy Turn Out |
1977 |
7 | 22 | Alliance Publicity |
|
7 | 23 | Alliance Statements Land |
|
7 | 24 | Alliance Steering Agendas |
|
7 | 25 | Alliance Steering Committee |
|
7 | 26 | Alliance Strip Mining Policy |
|
7 | 27 | American Agriculture News |
|
7 | 28 | Appalachia A Reference Book |
|
8 | 1 | App. Alliance |
|
8 | 2 | App. Alliance Mail List |
1981 |
8 | 3 | Appalachia Studies Conference |
|
8 | 4 | Appalachia Studies Conference |
1979 |
8 | 5 | ARC Fisher |
|
8 | 6 | Coal Data: A reference |
|
8 | 7 | Crossroads Press |
|
8 | 8 | ENUWS Health Memo |
|
8 | 9 | European Trip Letters |
1970 August-September |
8 | 10 | European Trip Letters |
1970 October |
8 | 11 | European Trip Letters |
1970 November-December |
8 | 12 | European Trip Letters |
undated |
8 | 13-14 | European Trip Letters
(Miscellaneous)
|
|
8 | 15 | FLOC |
|
8 | 16 | Gaventa Miners International Wales |
1980 |
8 | 17 | Highlander Reports |
1970 |
8 | 18 | Highlander Reports |
1971 |
8 | 19 | Highlander Reports |
1972 |
8 | 20 | Highlander Reports |
1973 |
8 | 21 | Highlander Reports |
1974 |
8 | 22 | Highlander Reports |
1975 |
8 | 23 | Highlander Reports |
1976 |
8 | 24 | Highlander Reports |
1977 |
8 | 25 | Highlander Reports |
1978 |
8 | 26 | Highlander Reports |
1979 |
8 | 27 | Highlander Reports |
1980 |
8 | 28 | Highlander Reports |
1981 |
8 | 29 | Highlander Reports |
1982-1983 |
9 | 1 | Highlander Reports
(Miscellaneous)
|
|
9 | 2 | ICA Dawson |
1980 |
9 | 3 | Island Creek Coal Company |
|
9 | 4 | Island Creek Coal Company Strip |
|
9 | 5 | Land ARC Research |
|
9 | 6 | Land Dev Rag |
|
9 | 7 | Miners and Millworks Calendar |
1979 |
9 | 8 | National Sacrifice Area |
|
9 | 9 | OSM Correspondence |
|
9 | 10 | OTA Correspondence |
|
9 | 11 | Outlook for US Coal |
|
9 | 12 | Poverty Primack/CCE |
|
9 | 13 | Rural Coal Contract |
|
9 | 14 | Rural Coal Correspondence |
|
9 | 15 | Rural Coal Reimbursement |
|
9 | 16 | Rural Coal Correspondence |
|
9 | 17 | Southern Appalachian Leadership Proposal |
|
9 | 18 | Scotland |
1981 |
9 | 19 | Strip Mining Lay of the Land Articles |
|
9 | 20 | TVA Buffalo Creek Tour |
|
9 | 21 | TVA DC Statements |
|
10 | 1 | TVA M. Spence |
|
10 | 2 | United Mine Workers Journal |
|
10 | 3 | Youth Project |
4: Northern Lights InstituteReturn to Top
The Northern Lights Research and Education Institute, Inc. of Helena, Montana was a regional research center operating in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming. It was an effort on the part of regional environmental community members to create a progressive think-tank that would investigate natural resource issues in the Northern Rockies and create a means of more effectively engaging the public in natural resources debates. In 1982, Mike Clark became the founding executive director and established the first office and programs in Helena, staying with the organization until 1984. The Institute eventually moved its offices to Missoula before it officially closed on May 2, 2003. Among the work conducted by the organization was the publication of a series of oral history interviews (mostly conducted by Deborah Tuck) of western community leaders. These interviews were published in a 1986 book titled The Native Home of Hope: People and the Northern Rockies. Book edited by Tom Bethell. These boxes contain oral history transcripts and the edited versions published in the book.
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | Folder | ||
10 | 4 | NL-HL Autio, Rudy |
|
10 | 5 | NL-HL Billings, Gretchen and Harry |
|
10 | 6 | NL-HL Banderob, Charles |
|
10 | 7 | NL-HL Brower, Madsen, Sjogren |
|
10 | 8 | NL-HL Cabot, Colleen |
|
10 | 9 | NL-HL Data Base |
|
10 | 10 | NL-HL Dickey, Lynn |
|
10 | 11 | NL-HL Dodge, Tyler |
|
10 | 12 | NL-HL Fuentes, Humberto |
|
10 | 13 | NL-HL Guth, Norman |
|
10 | 14 | NL-HL Hansberger, Bob |
|
11 | 1 | NL-HL Harvey, Ernie |
|
11 | 2 | NL-HL Jerry, Danielle |
|
11 | 3 | NL-HL Larson, T. A. |
|
11 | 4 | NL-HL Martell, Marvin and Shirley |
|
11 | 5 | NL-HL Mecca, Ernie |
|
11 | 6 | NL-HL Minnick, Walter |
|
11 | 7 | NL-HL Murry, Jim |
|
11 | 8 | NL-HL Pugh, Jack |
|
11 | 9 | NL-HL Preuit, Tom |
|
11 | 10 | NL-HL Pursley, Ken |
|
11 | 11 | NL-HL Santos, Rudy |
|
11 | 12 | NL-HL Silverman, Arnold |
|
11 | 13 | NL-HL Simpson, Pete |
|
14 | 1 | NL-HL Sooktis, Rubie |
|
14 | 2 | NL-HL Trueblood, Burtt |
|
14 | 3 | NL-HL Viall, Sandra |
|
14 | 4 | NL-HL Winestine, Belle |
|
14 | 5 | NL-HM Hansen, Reed |
|
14 | 6 | NL-HM Probable Discards |
|
14 | 7 | Unedited Transcript: Kemmis |
|
14 | 8 | Gillette, Wyoming |
1978 |
14 | 9 | Idaho Historical Society |
|
14 | 10 | Interviewees |
5: New World Mining District battleReturn to Top
In the late 1980s, a proposed gold mine on the Northeast corner of Yellowstone National Park became a poster child for national efforts to reform the 1872 Hard Rock Mining law. Located near Cooke City, Montana, in the New World Mining District, the site became the center of a mining effort by the Noranda Corporation, a Canadian company, through its subsidiary arms, Hemlo Gold Company and Crown Butte Resources, Ltd. Concerned local citizens formed the Beartooth Alliance, an arm of the Northern Plains Resource Council, and began to monitor the mine exploration. Ralph and Sue Glidden and Heidi and Jim Barrett, and Wade King were key leaders. Julia Page and Richard Parks of the Gardiner-based Bear Creek Council provided strategic support. Eventually the groups decided to oppose the mine and were joined by other NGOs, including the Greater Yellowstone Coalition, American Rivers, the Sierra Club, Montana Wildlife Federation, Wyoming Outdoor Council, Gallatin Wildlife Association, and the Northwest Wyoming Resource Council. Key players in the ten-year campaign included a wide range of citizens. GYC board members helped with fund raising and outreach around the country, including Dwight Minton, Albert Wells, Tim Swanson, Gretchen Long Glickman, John Winsor and Andy Andrews. Local ranch owners Gus Hart and Ed Spencer broaded the effort. Doug Honnold, the head of the Northern Rockies office of Earthjustice, was the lead attorney for the conservation community and was assisted by attorney Susan Daggett. Tom Cassidy of American Rivers was a key resource. GYC staffers Ed Lewis, Louisa Willcox, Bob Ekey, Peter Angst, Don Bockman and Brian Kuehl provided crucial campaign support. On the company side, Noranda officials Ian Bayer, Joe Baylis and former Senator Birch Bayh were crucial decision-makers. After Earthjustice won a lawsuit determining that Noranda had violated key provisions of the federal Clean Water Act, Honnold and Clark led negotiations with the company and the federal government. Then-President Bill Clinton's staff and Clark and Honnold spent months working with the company until a final agreement was reached. The federal administration then withdrew all mining permits and closed the New World Mine District to further mining claims. Clinton announced this victory on August 12, 1996. Officials with the President's Council of Environmental Quality led the federal effort, particularly CEQ senior staffer Ray Clark and CEQ Chair Katie McGinty. Yellowstone Park Superintendent Mike Finley was instrumental in the successful effort to halt the mine.
The files in this series represent documentation kept by Mike Clark during the long battle, including personal notes, reports, environmental impact statements, legal documents and correspondence. The complete documentation of the ten-year campaign to stop the mine can be found in the records of the Greater Yellowstone Coalition and the offices of Earthjustice, in Bozeman. Many of the groups and individuals mentioned above show up in these files. The folders in this series have retained the labels Clark assigned them with minor revisions for consistency and have been placed in alphabetical order. Folders containing critical letters and memos regarding the negotiations have been indicated with an asterisk.
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | Folder | ||
14 | 11 | Agreement – Notes and Memos |
|
15 | 1 | Battle Mountain Gold – Annual Report |
|
15 | 2 | Billings Gazette – Press |
|
15 | 3 | Bozeman Chronicle – Press |
|
15 | 4 | Burden of Gilt |
|
15 | 5 | Coal Rights and Reserves |
|
15 | 6 | Cockburn |
|
15 | 7 | Cooke City Area – Mineral Area Withdrawal |
|
15 | 8 | Cooke Maps |
|
15 | 9 | Crown Butte – CEQ |
|
15 | 10 | Crown Butte – Press |
|
15 | 11 | Deep Sea Mining |
|
15 | 12 | End of the Battle Letters * |
|
15 | 13 | Golden Patents, Empty Pockets |
|
16 | 1 | Greater Yellowstone Coalition – Memos and Press – New World Mine |
|
16 | 2 | Hardrock Mining and Reclamation |
|
16 | 3 | History of the Cooke City Area |
|
16 | 4 | Jack Doyle – Investigative report on Noranda |
|
16 | 5 | Jack Doyle
Investigative report on Noranda
|
|
16 | 6 | Jim Jensen – Complaints and Memos |
|
16 | 7 | Michael S. Clark – Testimony before House Committee on Energy |
|
16 | 8 | Mineral Policy Center – The Orange Paper |
|
16 | 9 | Mining Activists Sourcebook |
1998 |
16 | 10 | New World Briefing Book – prepared for Clinton White House staff |
|
16 | 11 | New World Mine – Agreement |
|
16 | 12 | New World Mine – Arguments |
|
17 | 1 | New World Mine – Beers Article |
|
17 | 2 | New World Mine – Book Proposal |
|
17 | 3 | New World Mine – Consent Decree * |
|
17 | 4 | New World Mine – Crown Butte Agreement |
|
17 | 5 | New World Mine – District Map |
|
17 | 6 | New World Mine – Financial Analysis |
|
17 | 7 | New World Mine – GAO Study |
|
17 | 8 | New World Mine – John Koerth "Clean up" |
|
17 | 9 | New World Mine – Miscellaneous |
|
17 | 10 | New World Mine – Notes |
|
17 | 11 | New World Mine – Press Memo |
|
17 | 12 | New World Mine – Project Financial Analysis Draft |
|
17 | 13 | New World Mine – Proposal |
|
17 | 14 | New World Mine – Reactions to Buyout |
|
18 | 1-2 | New World Mine – Reading and Reports |
|
18 | 3 | New World Mine – Reclamation Plans |
|
18 | 4 | New World Mine – Removal, Restoration and Response |
|
18 | 5 | New World Mine – Repositioning plans and reports
Repositioning plans and reports
|
|
18 | 6 | New World Mine – Victory Press |
|
18 | 7 | Noranda |
|
18 | 8 | Not all That Glitters |
|
18 | 9 | Project Summary – New World Mining District
(Response and Restoration)
|
|
18 | 10 | Southwest Quarter Map |
|
18 | 11 | U.S. Gold Industry |
1998 |
18 | 12 |
6: Yellowstone Land Ownership StudyReturn to Top
Within this set of documents are the papers, notes, and workings of Mike Clark and colleagues culminating in the Yellowstone Heritage Trust's Land Ownership and Ranchland Dynamics Study. Julia Haggerty was the primary researcher. Her colleague Professor Hannah Goshell explains this study in a grant proposal, also contained in this file, describing, "look[ing] at large ranch sales in three Rocky Mountain Counties over the past ten years and consider[ing] some of the implications." Examining socioeconomic, farming/ranching, types of ownership, and public use, the researchers express the importance of land conservation and private land ownership without coercive buy-out tactics. As Clark puts it, conservation efforts "require comprehensive information on ranchland ownership dynamics" in order to develop "strategies for private land conservation throughout Northern Rocky Mountain Region" to avoid fragmentation of landscapes in "critical areas." With comprehensive budgets, correspondence, grant proposals, research, and drafts, this file creates a narrative of Ranchland Dynamics.
Container(s) | Description | |
---|---|---|
Box | Folder | |
18 | 13 | Big Open Project Bison |
18 | 14 | Bozeman Daily Chronicle- Condos or Cows |
19 | 1 | C.L. Wainwright - National Park Idea |
19 | 2 | Grants and Land Research |
19 | 3 | Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem and NewCo Business Plan |
19 | 4 | Greater Yellowstone Heritage Trust - Correspondence, Donations |
19 | 5 | Haines: Yellowstone National Park Guide |
19 | 6 | Larry Spears - Right to 1st Refusal |
19 | 7 | LaSalle - Adams Fund Grant Proposal |
19 | 8 | Madison Valley Ranchlands Group |
19 | 9 | Miscellaneous Grant Proposal Information |
19 | 10 | Northern Region National Forests |
19 | 11-13 | Paul G. Allen Forest Protection Foundation File |
19 | 14-15 | Paul G. Allen Grants |
20 | 1 | P. Coverdell Open Space Conservation Bill |
20 | 2 | Peter Stein - Scope of Work September 24-25 Meeting Memo |
20 | 3 | Private Lands Meeting Correspondence |
20 | 4 | Ranchland Dynamics - Budget |
20 | 5 | Ranchland Dynamics in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem |
20 | 6-7 | Ranchland Dynamics in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem |
20 | 8 | Ranchland Dynamics - Research |
20 | 9 | Ranchland Dynamics Paper - Drafts |
20 | 10 | Rocky Mountain Front |
20 | 11 | Spencer, Ed
(Yellowstone Institute Board member)
|
20 | 12 | Squirrel Meadows - Targhee National Forest |
20 | 13 | The Turner Foundation Proposal |
20 | 14 | Yellowstone Heritage Trust - Board Notes |
20 | 15 | Yellowstone Heritage Trust - Budget |
20 | 16 | Yellowstone Heritage Trust - For Profit |
21 | 1 | Yellowstone Heritage Trust - IRS Info |
21 | 2 | Yellowstone Heritage Trust - Land Ownership Studies: Ranchlands Finance |
21 | 3-4 | Yellowstone Heritage Trust - Values/Mission Statement |
21 | 5 | Yellowstone National Park Facts |
7: Crown of the Continent reportReturn to Top
Glacier National Park is one of the premiere national parks in the lower 48 states, spanning over a million acres of land throughout Canada, Montana and Idaho. The park contains one of the most complete North American ecosystem on the continent, not having a recorded an extinction in over 200 years. This pristine region earned the nickname "Crown of the Continent" from 20th Century conservationist George Grinnell. On-going efforts to protect it involve government agencies and NGO's on both sides of the border. The National Parks Conservation Association hired Clark as a consultant to interview leaders of these groups to determine if a new regional coordinating group should be created. Clark worked as a consultant and organizer for the group: conducting interviews, assessing protocols, gathering research, and connecting with a multitude of groups within the "Crown". These files are the collection of information, research, correspondence, and reports he gathered while working on the project.
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | Folder | ||
21 | 6-7 | Background Research Land, Environment, and Ecosystems |
|
21 | 8 | Bethell, Thomas N., letter to Susan E. Sechler |
|
21 | 9-10 | CoC Background Research Persons of interest |
|
21 | 11 | CoC Correspondence |
|
21 | 12 | CoC Maps |
|
22 | 1 | CoC Reports and Drafts |
|
22 | 2 | CoC Stewardship Council Planning Committee |
|
22 | 3 | Conference Call Memos, Emails and Minutes |
|
22 | 4-5 | Contracts + Talks NPCA |
|
22 | 6 | Elk Valley Footprint |
|
22 | 7 | Emails Background Research Interview list NPCA |
|
22 | 8-9 | Flathead Campaign |
|
22 | 10 | Flathead Coal |
|
22 | 11 | Glacier fund raising plan, Earth Friends Wildlife Foundation |
|
22 | 12 | Harvey Locke |
|
22 | 13 | Higher Education vs. Environment |
|
22 | 14 | Huber Foundation |
|
22 | 15 | In the Realm of the Crown Drafts |
2008 July |
23 | 1 | In the Realm of the Crown Drafts |
2008 June |
23 | 2 | Info, Meetings and Minutes Background research |
|
23 | 3 | Interviews and Notes NPCA |
|
23 | 4 | Interview List - NPCA |
|
23 | 5 | Map Guide NPCA |
|
23 | 6 | Matthew McKinney |
|
23 | 7 | Meetings, Minutes and Plans |
|
23 | 8 | Moore Foundation |
|
23 | 9 | Phone Interviews NPCA |
|
23 | 10 | Satchello Interview |
|
23 | 11 | Wilburforce - NPCA |
8: General research filesReturn to Top
This series consists of material gathered or created by Mike Clark on a variety of topics he was interested in, along with a few documenting his time with the Greater Yellowstone Coalition, the Environmental Policy Institute, and Greenpeace US. The subject matter is broadly diffuse, with some files clearly the result of organizational work and others providing background information for policy statements and essays. Of particular interest is a folder of information Clark gathered on a notorious labor incident in 1922 Herrin, Illinois from records at the headquarters of the United Mine Workers. The folders have been alphabetically arranged.
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | Folder | ||
23 | 12 | "Against the Tide" |
|
23 | 13 | "Gone West" Rodriguez |
|
23 | 14 | "Northern Lights" by Michael Jamison |
|
23 | 15 | "Soundings" Environment in the Northwest |
|
23 | 16 | "Where is the common ground?" |
|
23 | 17 | Ace Investigations Reports and Handbook |
|
24 | 1 | Africa Conservation Fund |
|
24 | 2 | Bison |
|
24 | 3 | Bison Brucellosis |
|
24 | 4 | Bison Cattle hybrids in the wild |
|
24 | 5 | Bison CVT management |
|
24 | 16 | Bison Rasciot exchanges |
|
24 | 7 | Bison Record of decision |
|
24 | 8 | Bison Slaughter |
|
24 | 9 | Bison Slaughter
(continued)
|
|
24 | 10 | Bison in Yellowstone |
|
24 | 11 | Bison in Yellowstone History |
|
25 | 1 | Bison Wildlife Management |
|
25 | 2 | Blackfeet Water Rights |
|
25 | 3 | British Columbia, Climate |
|
25 | 4 | Brucellosis in the GYE, Research |
|
25 | 5 | Business Plan for Sustainable Forestry Futures |
|
25 | 6 | Butler Family Fund |
|
25 | 7 | CCSP Synthesis and Assessment |
|
25 | 8 | Clark Chemical and toxin research |
|
25 | 9 | Coal Rush |
|
25 | 10 | Cooke City Testimony
(New World Mining District)
|
|
25 | 11 | Denver Papers |
|
26 | 1-2 | Environmental history - Coal |
|
26 | 3 | Environmental Policy Institute Daily Notes |
1986 October December |
26 | 4 | Environmental Policy Institute Daily Notes |
1987 January April |
26 | 5 | Environmental Policy Institute Merger with the Friends of the Earth |
|
26 | 6 | EPI Memos and Notes |
|
26 | 7 | EPI Progress report |
|
26 | 8 | Flathead Subdivision lots |
|
26 | 9 | Florida Trip, US Sugar
(Friends of the Earth)
|
1988 |
26 | 10 | Forest Research |
|
26 | 11 | Foxfire Fund, Inc. Board of directors meetings |
|
26 | 12 | Friends of Earth, Environmental Action, Oceanic Society Merger |
|
26 | 13 | Gloria Flora S.O.S. |
|
26 | 14 | Goldsmith Ozone Meeting |
|
27 | 1 | GP China Trip |
|
27 | 2 | GP Correspondence |
|
27 | 3 | GP Executive Coaching |
|
27 | 4 | GP Executive Director |
|
27 | 5 | GP Frontline San Diego |
|
27 | 6 | GP Interim Executive Director |
|
27 | 7 | GP Interview List |
|
27 | 8 | GP Project Hot Seat |
|
27 | 9 | GP Staff |
|
27 | 10 | GP Strategic Board Meeting |
|
27 | 11 | Greater Yellowstone Coalition Files |
|
27 | 12 | Grizzly Files |
|
27 | 13 | Guide to Yellowstone Wetlands |
|
27 | 14 | GYC Grizzly Protection vs. Fish and Wildlife |
|
27 | 15 | GYC Letter to Don Barry |
|
28 | 1 | ||
28 | 2 | Hornocker Acquisition Plan Sonoma County Study |
|
28 | 3 | James C. Penny Nuclear Disarmament |
|
28 | 4 | Joy E. Bannerman, The Blood Heat of Innocence |
|
28 | 5 | Malcom McKenna |
|
28 | 6 | Mike Clark Articles |
|
28 | 7 | Miscellaneous Papers |
|
28 | 8 | Murie Center Crisis Management |
|
28 | 9 | National Park Service History |
|
28 | 10 | NEPA Thomas Hearings |
|
28 | 11 | Northern Rockies Ecosystem Management Paper |
|
28 | 12 | NPCA Handbook |
|
28 | 13 | Northwest Area Foundation
(NWA)
|
|
28 | 14 | NWA |
|
28 | 15 | NWA Background Research |
|
28 | 16 | NWA Consultant Agreement |
|
28 | 17 | NWA Interviews |
|
29 | 1 | NWA Memo on Leadership |
|
29 | 2 | NWA Miscellaneous Papers |
|
29 | 3 | NWA Northwest Area Report |
|
29 | 4 | NWA Social Capital |
|
29 | 5 | NWA Social Capital Community |
|
29 | 6 | NWA Source Material |
|
29 | 7 | Otter Creek Letter |
2009 July |
29 | 8 | Placed based legislation Nie and Fiebag |
|
29 | 9 | Population and Environment |
|
29 | Ranch Owners Study |
||
29 | Report on the Southern Appalachian |
||
29 | Rosemont Tucson |
||
29 | Tester - Flathead Mine |
||
29 | The extermination of the American Bison |
||
29 | Wetlands in Louisiana |
||
29 | Whetstone Letters |
||
29 | White bark Pine Report |
||
29 | Windcall |
||
28 | Winter Use Alliance |
||
29 | Winter Use Planning |
||
30 | Winter Use Press + Editorials |
||
30 | Wonderlust Class |
2008 | |
30 | Yellowstone Business Partners |
||
30 | Yellowstone Ecosystem |
||
30 | Yellowstone Heritage Trust |
9: Visual ObjectsReturn to Top
A collection of visual materials from the Clark collection, including VHS tapes, photo albums, loose photos and certificates. The photograph album was a gift from the staff of the GYC on Clark's retirement as director of the organization, and many of the loose numbered photographs document the ceremony attended by President Bill Clinton to recognize the withdrawal of the New World Mining District from development.
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
vhs | |||
1 | CBS News Mike Clark interview on Persian Gulf |
1991 June 10 | |
2 | GYC Snowmobiles in Yellowstone |
||
3 | EPI A Broken Promise |
1988 December 22 | |
4 | Yellowstone: The Legacy of a Park |
||
5 | President Clinton: The New World Mine Agreement |
1996 August 12 | |
6 | Yellowstone Snowmobiles Jon Catton/Tim Jacobsen |
2002 April 14 | |
7 | Dateline NBC |
1995 August 8 | |
8 | Mike Clark CNN Call |
1991 April 22 | |
9 | YNN News "Buffalo Breath" |
||
Box | item | ||
12 | 1 | GYC Photo Album |
|
12 | 2-3 | Oversized Copy of Photo #1 |
|
12 | 4 | Warrant and Deed for New World Mine |
|
12 | 5 | African Conservation Fund, Wildlife Direct business plan
(Mike Clark on the board of directors)
|
|
12 | 6-30 | Newspaper articles related to New World Mine and Greater Yellowstone Coalition |
1987-1997 |
13 | 1-7 | America's Voice for a Greater Yellowstone sign
Gallatin Range
|
|
Folder | |||
30 | 6 | Photographs: Bill Clinton Visit - New World Mine (1-10) |
1996 |
30 | 7 | Photographs: Bill Clinton Visit - New World Mine (11-20) |
1996 |
30 | 8 | Photographs: New World Mine Celebration (21-25) |
|