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Web site maintained by
George Pilling, District Librarian, Visalia Unified School
District.
Last updated
February, 2010
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The settlers in Tulare
County loved the beauty of the mountains. They wanted to
preserve some of the trees and rivers so people would always
know this beauty. In 1890, Sequoia National Park was
established by the federal government in Washington D.C. This
park is named for the giant redwood trees that grow there.
Today, millions of visitors come every year to camp, hike, and
fish.
Before it
was a national park, the area in the high mountains attracted
many people. They hunted and trapped the deer, bears, and other
animals. They cut trees for lumber. They sent their sheep and
cattle into the forest to eat and get fat. And they mined for
silver and gold. In 1867 some men found silver in the Mineral
King valley. People came from all over the world to try
to mine the silver, but not much was found.
In the 1880s some people formed a special town they called
"Kaweah Colony." They built houses near Three Rivers and built
a long road into the forest. They wanted to cut the trees to
make money. When Sequoia National Park was established, they
could no t cut the trees. The road they built is still there.
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Giant Sequoia Trees |
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Now Mineral King is part of Sequoia National Park. Thousands of
people go to the park each year to hike, camp, and fish. People
enjoy watching animals like deer, squirrels, and marmots.
Sometimes people see a black bear or even a mountain lion.
There are many birds, like robins, woodpeckers, and jays, and
there are lizards, snakes, and salamanders and frogs along the
creeks.
Plants in
the national park are beautiful. In the spring, wildflowers
pain the hillsides yellow, blue, purple, and white. Aspen trees
turn bright gold in the fall. Redbud, dogwood, and buckeye
trees have beautiful flowers in the spring and summer. Dark
green pine needles are beautiful against the white snow of
winter. The Giant Sequoia trees are thousands of years
old. One tree, the General Sherman tree, is the largest living
thing on the earth! |

Moro Rock in the spring |
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