David Brauer is an environmentalist, a climber, a believer who loves the wilderness. As a skilled climber he built the first 70 routes at Yosemite and then continued climbing Ship Rock in 1939, when he was called "the last mountaineering problem in the US". He is an excellent environmental activist and founder of many environmental groups, the most famous being the Sierra Club Foundation. Later he continued to establish the Foundation of the Earth (FOE) in 1969 and the Earth Isle of Laboratory in 1982.
In this respect, they follow the footprints of John Muir and others who struggle to save Sera's absurd things. Among them is David Brower (father of writer Ken Brower). David Brower served as executive chairman of Sierra Club for 17 years and founded the Friends of the Earth organization in 1969. In 2010, my friend Gary Noy and I collaborated on "Landscape the Landscape: Sierra Nevada Collection" in collaboration with Sierra College Press, Santa Clara University, Heyday Books. We all intend to include David Brower's work, praise, and those who did a lot of work to save Sierra Nevada. In his excerpt from "Calm Wilderness", David Brauer wrote in many other ways:
David Brower was born in Berkeley Hills, California in 1912. When he was young, his father took him to Sera, where Blauer found his love for nature. After completing entomology studies at the University of California, Berkeley, Broll left Sierra Leone, became a world-class climber, and won over 70 peaks. "If you settle in somewhere in Sierra Nevada at night, you will know where he is in the morning." Following the World War II platoon leader, Braer began. In collaboration with the Sierra Club, he became the first executive director of the club in 1952. During this extraordinary period, Broll will become the most important naturalist and environmentalist in the world until he was dismissed in 1969.