Yosemite is the most famous of California parks covering the
eastern portions of Tuolumne, Mariposa and Madera counties. The Park covers an
area of over 3,000 km² and reaches across the western slopes of the Sierra
Nevada mountain chain. Yosemite is visited by over 3.5 million people each year,
many of whom drive 3½ hours from San Francisco and only spend time in the 18 km²
of Yosemite Valley. Designated a World Heritage Site in 1984, Yosemite is
renowned for its spectacular granite cliffs, glaciated U-shaped valley,
waterfalls and hanging valleys, clear streams, Giant Sequoia groves, and
biological diversity. Almost 95% of the Park is designated wilderness.
Yosemite supports a diversity of plants and animals. The Park
ranges in altitude from 610 to 4,000 metres and contains five major vegetation
zones: chaparral/oak woodland, lower montane, upper montane, subalpine, and
alpine. Of California's 7,000 plant species, about 50% occur in the Sierra
Nevada and more than 20% within Yosemite. The Park contains more than 160 rare
plants and some unique soils.
Early European-Americans first used the term
"Yosemite" to refer to the Indian people who were reported to live in
a yet-undiscovered mountain stronghold. Only in 1851, when the Mariposa
Battalion first entered the Valley in a war with the area’s indigenous people,
the Miwok, did they coin Yosemite as a place name. Yosemite is derived from a
Miwok word "Yehemite," which has been translated as "some among
them are killers". Oso-meti of the Yosemite Bear People suggests the
correct translation is "the killers" or "the grizzlies" (see
comments below).
Yosemite was set aside as a natural preserve in 1864 when
Abraham Lincoln signed the Yosemite Grant, which gave guardianship of Yosemite
Valley and the Mariposa Grove to the State of California. The main proponent of
the park, LaFayette Burnell, who led the Mariposa Battalion and professed a
'take-no-prisoners' approach to the Miwok, wanted to "sweep the territory
of any scattered bands that might infest it." Once the Park was
established, it was run by the U.S. Army for the next 52 years before being
taken over by the National Parks Service.
The Miwok petitioned the U.S. government in 1890 calling for
compensation for their losses and denouncing the managers of the park. "The
valley is cut up completely with dusty, sandy roads leading from the hotels of
the white in every direction… All seem to come only to hunt money… The
valley has been taken away from us [for] a pleasure ground…." Their pleas
were ignored and further evictions of remnant Miwok settlements were made in
1906, 1929 and as late as 1969. What the Miwok had noted was that the national
parks, set up to preserve 'wilderness' regions 'unimpaired for the enjoyment of
future generations' were also designed with a profit motive. Indeed, the first
parks of Yosemite and Yellowstone, were created largely as a result of pressure
from the railway-building lobby, which sought to increase the numbers of
fare-paying passengers by routing their tracks near scenic sites for what today
we have reinvented as 'eco-tourism'.
Yosemite is a large park, but the main tourist sights are
concentrated in the Yosemite Valley. A paved road circles around the valley.
Most tourists simply drive around the road and take pictures of the main sights.
At present, cars are allowed within the Park. A free voluntary shuttle bus
system is available to many areas throughout Yosemite Valley. Entrance fees are
collected at all entrance stations.
Yosemite Valley: Google Earth
Natural Attractions
Half Dome (Yosemite's most distinctive
feature)
Upper Yosemite Falls (among the tallest
waterfalls in the world)
El Capitan (single largest block of
granite in the world)
Mariposa Grove (huge sequoia trees)
Mirror Lake (mirror reflections of
Tenaya Canyon)
Wild bears
Human Attractions
Lodges
Camping
Hotels
plus Visitor Centre,
painting, skiing, fishing, hiking, rock climbing, sailing, horse riding...