Saving Wyoming's Hoback: The Grassroots Movement that Stopped Natural Gas Development

Winner of the Wallace Stegner Prize in Environmental Humanities

In late 2012, more than one hundred people gathered to hear a long-awaited announcement: the Trust for Public Land had succeeded in preventing natural gas development in the remote Hoback Basin of Wyoming. This landmark agreement—purchasing leases from Plains Exploration Company—would not have come to pass without the extraordinary will and expertise of local citizens. Unchallenged, the proposed natural gas development in the national forest near the hamlet of Bondurant, Wyoming, would have brought roads, pipelines, water and air pollution, and a complete change in the character of the landscape and its communities.
     Saving Wyoming's Hoback tells the story of the Hoback and Noble Basins in northwestern Wyoming and of the citizens who worked together to protect the land that they loved. Retired schoolteachers, mine workers, big game hunting outfitters, and other stakeholders brought together their knowledge of the area to achieve a single goal: to prevent the industrialization of the wild country that was their home. While some disagreed about specifics, their work as individuals and as coalitions is an inspiring example of how determined citizens can make a difference. 

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Saving Wyoming's Hoback: The Grassroots Movement that Stopped Natural Gas Development

Winner of the Wallace Stegner Prize in Environmental Humanities

In late 2012, more than one hundred people gathered to hear a long-awaited announcement: the Trust for Public Land had succeeded in preventing natural gas development in the remote Hoback Basin of Wyoming. This landmark agreement—purchasing leases from Plains Exploration Company—would not have come to pass without the extraordinary will and expertise of local citizens. Unchallenged, the proposed natural gas development in the national forest near the hamlet of Bondurant, Wyoming, would have brought roads, pipelines, water and air pollution, and a complete change in the character of the landscape and its communities.
     Saving Wyoming's Hoback tells the story of the Hoback and Noble Basins in northwestern Wyoming and of the citizens who worked together to protect the land that they loved. Retired schoolteachers, mine workers, big game hunting outfitters, and other stakeholders brought together their knowledge of the area to achieve a single goal: to prevent the industrialization of the wild country that was their home. While some disagreed about specifics, their work as individuals and as coalitions is an inspiring example of how determined citizens can make a difference. 

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Saving Wyoming's Hoback: The Grassroots Movement that Stopped Natural Gas Development

Saving Wyoming's Hoback: The Grassroots Movement that Stopped Natural Gas Development

by Florence R. Shepard, Susan L. Marsh
Saving Wyoming's Hoback: The Grassroots Movement that Stopped Natural Gas Development

Saving Wyoming's Hoback: The Grassroots Movement that Stopped Natural Gas Development

by Florence R. Shepard, Susan L. Marsh

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Overview

Winner of the Wallace Stegner Prize in Environmental Humanities

In late 2012, more than one hundred people gathered to hear a long-awaited announcement: the Trust for Public Land had succeeded in preventing natural gas development in the remote Hoback Basin of Wyoming. This landmark agreement—purchasing leases from Plains Exploration Company—would not have come to pass without the extraordinary will and expertise of local citizens. Unchallenged, the proposed natural gas development in the national forest near the hamlet of Bondurant, Wyoming, would have brought roads, pipelines, water and air pollution, and a complete change in the character of the landscape and its communities.
     Saving Wyoming's Hoback tells the story of the Hoback and Noble Basins in northwestern Wyoming and of the citizens who worked together to protect the land that they loved. Retired schoolteachers, mine workers, big game hunting outfitters, and other stakeholders brought together their knowledge of the area to achieve a single goal: to prevent the industrialization of the wild country that was their home. While some disagreed about specifics, their work as individuals and as coalitions is an inspiring example of how determined citizens can make a difference. 


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781607815136
Publisher: University of Utah Press
Publication date: 12/31/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 130
File size: 52 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Florence Rose Shepard is professor emerita in the department of Educational Studies at the University of Utah.

Susan Marsh is an award-winning writer living in Jackson, Wyoming. 

Table of Contents

Contents List of Maps Preface and Acknowledgments Glossary of Acronyms Chapter One. We Did It! Chapter Two. The Hoback Chapter Three. From Timber to Gas Wells (1946–1990) Chapter Four. Drill, Baby, Drill (1990–2006) Chapter Five. The Perfect Storm (2006–2010) Chapter Six. Too Special to Drill (2010–2013) Notes
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