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Winter
1999
[TEXT ARCHIVE WEB-PUBLISHED
MARCH 2002.
ORIGINAL PRINT PUBLICATION DATE: WINTER 1999.]
Charlotte
and Herbert Read:
Saving the Dunes
By
Eva Dienel
At
the base of Mount Baldy, a sign invokes the dilemma of defining
the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore. "Predator or Prey?"
reads the sign. Predator because the dunes are continually
moving, obliterating forest as they go. Prey because humankind's
penchant for development can move so much faster than the
dunes' geologic pace. The evidence is as clear as a day
at the beach, which along Indiana's lakeshore includes equal
parts sand, water, and majestic views of industry. Puffing
steel mills are as accepted by the millions of beach-goers
as is the heat of summer.
Those
millions, however, do not include Herb Read, one of the
few not properly dressed for a day at West Beach. Milling
around him are young women with tanned bodies wrapped in
bikinis and kids scuffling along in Tevas behind parents
toting huge rubber rafts, coolers, and towels. Dressed in
a white shirt, blue jeans, and walking shoes, with a camera
slung around his neck, Herb's here to teach me.
For
the past 46 years, Herb and his wife Charlotte have been
active members in the Save the Dunes Council, a preservation
coalition that has contended with big industry and an assembly
of politicians, private property owners, and the National
Park Service. The Council's goal is enabling a park marked
by political boundaries to be defined instead by its own
ecology, a contiguous 25-mile stretch of lakeshore and inland
vegetation, interspersed with bogs, pannes, and more than
1,400 vascular plant species. Among national parks, Indiana
Dunes National Lakeshore ranks seventh in native plant diversity,
far greater than preserves many times its size. Right now,
however, the park map looks like a child's drawing, with
some park land outside the lines and some holes in the center.
"That's
park. That's not," Herb says, pointing first to the right,
then to the left, indicating which land they have won for
preservation as he drives along Indiana State Highway 12.
This
natural-versus-political boundary debate is played out in
most national parks, whether Yellowstone or the Indiana
Dunes. "Our struggles are to do what we can to improve the
ecological boundaries," says Charlotte, who is wearing a
Save the Dunes tee shirt. "Scientists have realized it all
along. It's a balance between the needs of the resource
and the political realities of getting the resource protected."
The
difference at the Indiana Dunes is the people lobbying for
the park's protection. Founded by Dorothy Buell in 1952,
the Save the Dunes Council is a grass-roots effort Herb
and Charlotte joined because they feel personally connected
to the region. Unlike the larger parks in the West that
gained national attention with outsider champions such as
John Muir, the Indiana Dunes need the support of the local
community to survive.
The
Reads have made this a family crusade. "The Dunes are personally
special to me because I grew up in Chicago near Jackson
Park," Charlotte says. "I always had a park in my backyard.
I thought everybody had that opportunity, and I think that
created an awareness and sensitivity in me early on, that
open spaces and places to go are a part of growing up."
Herb's family also lived in south Chicago and made frequent
trips to the Dunes when he was young. Now, given their full
schedules working at the Council's office in Michigan City
and occasional lobbying trips to Washington, D.C., the two
don't get to visit the Dunes as much as they would like.
But,
then, the Reads live in the park. Their current house, tucked
in the woods of the National Lakeshore, is on leaseback
until 2010, when it becomes property of the federal government.
Many of the residents who settled before the Dunes became
part of the park system also have their homes on leaseback.
Herb
joined the Council in 1952 as chair of the engineering committee,
and after their five children got older, Charlotte became
the Council's first employee in 1974. The Council now has
1,000 members, an office, a small staff, and a gift shop
run by volunteers. And support from outside the Council
is growing. Other regional groups, such as the Friends of
the Dunes and the Shirley Heinze Environmental Fund, have
joined the effort to preserve the Dunes.
"While
the Dunes Council was the leader in all of the Dunes legislation,
we were never there alone," Charlotte says. "In 1992, we
had a coalition of 22 groups in Indiana convincing our federal
legislators that the Dunes area needed to be larger."
Since
Congress first authorized the creation of an 8,000-acre
Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore in 1966, the Council has
lobbied in Washington dozens of times, expanding the national
and state park's boundaries to approximately 16,000 acres
(see our Into the Wild profile).
Many of the Dunes bills were small victories 13 acres
here, another plot there but slowly the culture is
changing. The steel industry, the Council's biggest opponent
in the 1960s and mid-70s, has morphed into a quasi-ally,
even donating park land for the protection of endangered
species such as the Karner blue butterfly.
The
next step most likely will be getting more support from
the people who use the park. With progress in education,
especially at the new Indiana Center for Learning at Camp
Goodfellow and the Paul H. Douglas Center for Environmental
Education at Miller Woods, younger kids are starting to
recognize the importance of open spaces and preservation.
And this education touches more than just the immediate
neighbors of the park. "You start with the kids,"
Charlotte adds with enthusiasm. "The next generation
will be more sensitive to the environment and ecological
boundaries of the park."
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