Mount Caroline Livermore (also known as Mount Livermore) is the high point of Angel Island , in Angel Island State Park , near the city of Tiburon in the San Francisco Bay , in the U.S. state of California . Its elevation is 791 feet (241 m).
8-510: The peak is named for American conservationist Caroline Sealy Livermore , whose work led to the protection of Angel Island and its declaration as a state park . 37°51′41″N 122°25′51″W / 37.8615°N 122.4309°W / 37.8615; -122.4309 This Marin County, California –related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This North America mountain, mountain range, or peak related article
16-464: A "green, open-space county master plan" relevant to the post- World War II period in the Bay Area. Through this league she achieved the conservation of Stinson Beach which later became a state beach park. She established Samuel B. Taylor Park and Tomales Bay State Park by ensuring acquisition of lands for their creation. She also led a movement to remove ugly "roadside billboards", which were marring
24-583: A period of 15 years where she interacted with national and state level lawmakers. Her work led to the protection of Angel Island and its declaration as a state park. Consequently, the highest mountain on the Angel Island was named Mount Livermore in her honor. Livermore was Chairman of Women's Committees on the Pacific Coast . She was responsible for the creation of the Marin Audubon Society ,
32-471: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Caroline Sealy Livermore Caroline Sealy Livermore (7 August 1883 – 2 February 1968) was an American conservationist with emphasis in environment planning and protection. Livermore was mostly in the San Francisco Bay Area in both Marin County and the shore areas, during the 20th century. She pursued her conservation efforts over
40-802: The Marin Art and Garden Center (in Ross, California ), Marin Conservation League , the Richardson Bay Foundation , and the Point Reyes National Seashore Foundation . Caroline (née Sealy) Livermore was born on 7 August 1883, in Galveston TX, to George Sealy , a business man, and Magnolia (née Willis) Sealy. She married Norman B Livermore, an engineer cum businessman from a wealthy and well known family. He had his own firm in
48-481: The 1930s which was later renamed to Norman B. Livermore & Sons in 1938 with his sons as share holders. They moved to the glades of Ross to the north of Mill Valley in 1930 with their five sons: Norman Banks , George Sealy, John Sealy , Horatio Putnam, and Robert. Her husband was also represented on many corporate boards and in the Marin Republican Party central committee. In this county she took to
56-514: The scenery, by coordinating with supervisors of the county and got an ordinance passed through a state bill, which was the first anti-billboard ordinance. In the Richardson Bay tidal zone her efforts of conservation resulted in relocation and conservation of the Lyford Mansion , now declared a Marin historic site. After reviving the non-functional Angel Island Foundation, in 1955 they purchased
64-570: The task of conservation as an "indefatigable warrior for the green cause". They had built up a reputation in the county and her sons were also well established professionally. In the 1930s, Livermore took up the matter of conservation of Marin County by first pursuing stoppage of the degradation of the slopes of Mount Tamalpais which acted as an important watershed. She established the Marin Conservation League, which she spearheaded for twenty years, with objective to prepare and implement
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