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Disneyland on the Mountain

Walt, the Environmentalists, and the Ski Resort That Never Was

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A fascinating look at Walt Disney's last, unfinished project and the controversy that surrounded it.

It was going to be Disneyland at the top of a mountain. A vacation destination where guests could ski, go ice skating, or be entertained by a Disney Imagineer-created band of Audio-Animatronic bears. In the summer, visitors could fish, camp, hike, or take a scenic chairlift ride to the top of a mountain. It was the Mineral King resort in Southern California, and it was Walt Disney's final passion project. But there was one major obstacle to Walt's dream: the growing environmentalist movement of the 1960s.

In Disneyland on the Mountain: Walt, the Environmentalists, and the Ski Resort That Never Was, Greg Glasgow and Kathryn Mayer provide an unprecedented look inside the Mineral King saga, from its origins at the 1960 Winter Olympics to the years-long environmental fight that eventually shut the development down. The fight, which went all the way to the Supreme Court, reshaped the environmental movement and helped to put in place long-reaching laws to protect nature. Although the court battle, coupled with Walt's death in 1966, meant the end for the Mineral King resort, the ideas and planning behind it have permeated throughout the Walt Disney company and the ski tourism industry in ways that are still seen today.

With firsthand interviews and behind-the-scenes details, Disneyland on the Mountain offers incredible access to a part of Disney history that hasn't been thoroughly explored before, including Walt's love of nature, how the company changed after Walt's death, and of course, the story of Mineral King. It's a tale of man versus nature, ambition versus mortality, and how a gang of scrappy environmentalists took on one of America's most beloved companies.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 2, 2023
      Journalists Glasgow and Mayer debut with an illuminating history of a little-known chapter of Walt Disney’s career that was also a victory in the early years of the environmental movement. In 1965, Disney and his company came to an agreement with the federal government regarding the development of a stretch of Sequoia National Forest called Mineral King. The mogul envisioned the space as a ski resort made in the image of Disneyland, his California theme park. Over the next four years, Disney, who died in 1966, and his successors created a plan for the resort that was approved by the U.S. Forest Service. A cluster of conservationists, including Sierra Club executive Mike McCloskey and attorney Leland Selna, fought back in court for years to keep the project from coming to fruition. By the mid-1970s, the Walt Disney Company gave up on the project, and in 1978 Congress added Mineral King to a list of protected natural areas to prevent its future development. Drawing on firsthand interviews, the authors provide an enticing combination of behind-the-scenes reporting on the Disney company and environmental movement history, including the ramifications of this episode on both the company’s future developments and on environmental law. It’s a rewarding deep dive.

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  • English

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