George, James and Bob Marshall 7/24/2007 NYS DEC Born: February 11, 1904

Died: May 15, 2000

Married: Elisabeth Dublin

Children: Roger Marshall, Nancy Louise Marshall

George Marshall, brother of Bob Marshall, was an American economist, political activist, and conservationist. He was an early leader both of The Wilderness Society and later the Sierra Club. He spent the summers of his youth at the family cabin at Knollwood.

Marshall was the third and youngest son of Louis Marshall, noted constitutional lawyer and co-founder of the American Jewish Committee, and Florence Lowenstein. He grew up with his sister Ruth, and brothers James and Bob in Manhattan. All four children attended Felix Adler's Ethical Culture School. George Marshall continued his education at Columbia University, where he earned bachelor's and master's degrees. This was followed by doctoral studies and a PhD in economics from the Brookings Institution, in 1930. His doctoral dissertation was entitled "The Machinists' Union: A Study in Institutional Development".

From 1934-37, Marshall worked as an economist for the consumer division of the National Recovery Administration under Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal.

He served as chairman of the National Federation for Constitutional Liberties and the Civil Rights Congress, a leading leftist group that was active early the United States civil rights movement, providing leadership and funding; in the late 1940s and early 1950s he worked with Paul Robeson, Dashiell Hammett and William L. Patterson on litigation protecting the rights of African-Americans and American communists. Marshall was called before the House Committee on Un-American Activities, where he was cited for Contempt of Congress for refusing to turn over records from the National Federation for Constitutional Liberties. Convicted, he served three months in a federal prison in 1950.

Marshall had a lifelong dedication to conservationism. He spent his childhood summers at Knollwood Club, his father's Great Camp on the shores of Lower Saranac Lake. He said that upon arriving at the Lower Lake, they "entered a world of freedom and informality, of living plants and spaces, of fresh greens and exhilarating blues, of giant, slender pines and delicate pink twinflowers, of deer and mosquitoes, of fishing and guide boats and tramps through the woods". 1 With his brother Bob and their guide Herb Clark, he climbed all 46 Adirondack High Peaks (mountains taller than 4,000 feet), an accomplishment that made him a founding member of the "46ers".

After his brother's early death, Marshall became a trustee of the Robert Marshall Wilderness Fund, which supported conservation activities especially of The Wilderness Society, founded by his brother.

George Marshall made major contributions to The Wilderness Society, and then the Sierra Club, for more than 50 years. He edited The Wilderness Society's magazine, The Living Wilderness from 1957-61, and served as president of that organization from 1971-72. Marshall served on the board of directors of the Sierra Club from 1959-68, and later as "director, president, and vice chairman".

Another of George Marshall's contributions was to edit his brother, Bob's, notebooks on the Alaskan wilderness, published as Alaska Wilderness: Exploring the Central Brooks Range.

Marshall moved to London until late in his life. He returned to New York in 1993, following the death of his wife, Elisabeth Dublin. He died on May 15, 2000, in Nyack, New York. 2

George Marshall donated his library of Adirondack books to the Adirondack Collection of the Saranac Lake Free Library.

Footnotes

1. Marshall, George. 1951. "Adirondacks to Alaska: A Biographical Sketch of Robert Marshall". Ad-i-Ron-Dac XV(3): pp. 44–59.
2. This article originally appeared on Wikipedia as George Marshall

 

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