50th anniversary of Earth Day
Fifty years ago, on April 22, 1970, U.S. Senator Gaylord Nelson founded Earth Day. A day for people to come together and raise awareness of environmental issues. The first Earth Day saw clean ups and protests take place across America and over the years the movement would spread across the globe, growing in size to include events such as concerts and day long ceremonies.
The following excerpts are from The Advocate newspaper article dated April 24, 1970, written by Associated Press writer Henrietta Leith who visited Union Square, New York, the day before the scheduled clean-up of the square by young environmental activists. She returned to the square the day after, on Earth Day, as the hours-long cleaning was winding up. Here's what she saw, before and after.
UNION SQUARE SHINE COMES AS ACTIVISTS SCRUB ENVIRONMENT
BY HENRIETTA LEITH
Tuesday
NEW YORK (AP) - It's just another day in Union Square park, gray and drizzly.
As you come out of the subway, you pass a shuttered newsstand piled high with trash, its awning hanging in ragged strips. Nearby a broken black umbrella is stuck in the bushes and an old metal chair, paint peeling, has been shoved between two shrubs.
The grass of the park is littered with cigarette butts, paper bags, beer and soda cans and bottles, the broken neck of the wine bottle under the sign that says, "No alcoholic beverages in this park." Soda straws lie near their abandoned paper wrappers.
[...] Workmen are up putting up the Earth Day speaker's platform on 14th Street, and a half-dozen shabby derelicts have taken some of the scrap lumber and started a fire with it in a wire trash basket, and they're huddled around the fire.
[...] The monument to the Declaration of Independence is grimy, its handsome bronze bas-relief figures streaked green and white.
A whole section of stone is missing from the inscription around the monument, so that a couple of words are missing from the Thomas Jefferson quotation, which should read: "How little do my countrymen know what precious blessings they are in possession of and which no other people on earth enjoy."
Wednesday
NEW YORK (AP) - As you come out of the subway at Union Square the first thing you notice is dazzling sunlight, turning the grass and the evergreen shrubbery bright green. Huge, multicoloured banners wave in the gentle breeze all over the park.
Under the bright banners are hundreds of kids. [...] A dozen girls are pushing big brooms along the paths, and other girls are using huge shovels to scoop up trash.
Many children wear gauze masks over their mouths and noses, in silent protest against pollution of their air. Others are handing out leaflets with the program of the day, still others selling Earth Day buttons.
You notice with surprise that the ragged awning strips no longer hang from the old newsstand, the bags of trash on its roof have vanished. The green paint looks cleaner.
The broken umbrella is gone, and so is the metal chair.
The paths are no longer gritty underfoot, and as you walk along them it is hard to spot a single cigarette butt on the grass, much less a can or bottle.
[...] Nearby the grass is so inviting that a woolly lamb brought in by one of the girls is chomping it busily.
At the Declaration of Independence monument, the green patina is still on the bronze, but it looks much cleaner.
There is still a gap in Jefferson's words, but one suspects that these kids will see that the missing stone is replaced.
Because one suspects this might be the first generation of Americans to really appreciate those "precious blessings."
Text from The Advocate Union Square Shine Comes as Activists Scrub Environment by Henrietta Leith
The AP Corporate Archives contributed to this blog