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         Miller Joaquin:     more books (100)
  1. Selected Writings of Joaquin Miller by Joaquin Miller, 1976-06
  2. Joaquin: Et Al (Maltese Edition) by Joaquin Miller, 2010-02-23
  3. The Complete Poetical Works by Joaquin Miller, 2010-04-06
  4. The Danites In The Sierras: In Four Acts (1910) by Joaquin Miller, 2010-09-10
  5. An illustrated history of the state of Montana: Containing a history of the state of Montana from the earliest period of its discovery to the present time, ... pioneers and prominent citizens of to-day by Joaquin Miller, 1999
  6. Panama, union of the oceans by Joaquin Miller, 2010-08-06
  7. First Fam'lies In The Sierras by Joaquin Miller, 2010-09-10
  8. Trelawny with Shelly and Byron by Joaquin Miller, 2010-09-04
  9. 49: The Gold-Seeker of the Sierras [1884 ] by Joaquin Miller, 2009-09-22
  10. The building of the city beautiful by Joaquin Miller, Ingalls Kimball, 2010-09-08
  11. First Fam'lies of the Sierras by Joaquin Miller, 2010-04-01
  12. Forty Nine: The Gold Seekers of the Sierras by Joaquin Miller, 1978-06
  13. As It Was In The Beginning: A Poem by Joaquin Miller, 2010-09-10
  14. Forty-Nine: An Idyl Drama Of The Sierras, In Four Acts (1910) by Joaquin Miller, 2010-09-10

41. California Reader - Joaquin Miller
"A collection of poems and other writings by joaquin miller, intimate of Oscar Wilde and Lily Category Arts Literature Authors M miller, joaquin......
http://www.notfrisco.com/calmem/miller/

42. Joaquin Miller
by Jack Adler Called the Poet of the Sierras and the Byron of the Rockies, CincinnatusHiner miller alias joaquin miller was also termed a poseur and a
http://www.literarytraveler.com/miller/joaquinmiller.htm
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VISIT OUR ISSUES John Steinbeck Edgar Allan Poe Jack Kerouac New England ... European Writers READ ABOUT IT Bookstore SEE IT FIRST HAND Literary T ours Literary E vents KEEP INFORMED Subscribe Contact Us About L iterary Traveler ... Help JOIN US Submissions Internships Links SPECIAL OFFERS Passport Newsletter JOAQUIN MILLER: POET OF THE SIERRAS by Jack Adler Called the "Poet of the Sierras" and the "Byron of the Rockies," Cincinnatus Hiner Miller alias Joaquin Miller was also termed a "poseur" and a "farce" during his careers as a 19th century lawyer, judge, pony express rider, newspaperman, teacher, cook, miner, conservationist and poet. Taking poetic license to heart, Miller was inventive about every aspect of his life including his name, age, and where he was born. However, 25 years after his death, his secret "California Diary" was unearthed, revealing that many of his unusual experiences were products of his lively imagination. Fellow litterateur, Ambrose Bierce, called him "The greatest liar this country has ever produced." Miller, though

43. American Verse Project Forthcoming Texts
miller, joaquin Songs of summer lands,; miller, joaquin Songs of the Sierras.miller, joaquin Songs of the soul,; miller, joaquin Songs of the sunlands.
http://www.hti.umich.edu/a/amverse/new-amverse.html

44. RE: SMEs : Was RE: Party XML Schema Defintions
Cheers, Arofan Gregory Original Message- From joaquin miller mailtomiller@joaquin.netSent Thursday, February 08, 2001 1248 PM To ebxml-core
http://lists.ebxml.org/archives/ebxml-core/200102/msg00052.html
ebxml-core message
Date Prev Thread Prev Thread Next Date Next ... Elist Home Subject RE: SMEs : was RE: Party XML Schema Defintions
  • From martin.me.roberts@bt.com To : ebxml-core@lists.ebxml.org Date : Fri, 09 Feb 2001 09:15:27 +0000
Dear all, The data seperation from UI is good but I get a bit worried when you end up with IDs being the main way of distinguishing an construct. Would these be numbers? who would issue them? etc become issue. If however you said that the ID was the initial semantic bearing name such as ( at this point I dive into semantic soup and drown! perhaps ID are a good idea after all.!!!:) Martin M.E. Roberts xml designer, BTexaCT 01473 643775 martin.me.roberts@bt.com -Original Message- From: Gregory, Arofan [ mailto:arofan.gregory@commerceone.com mailto:miller@joaquin.net ] Sent: Thursday, February 08, 2001 12:48 PM To: ebxml-core@lists.ebxml.org Subject: RE: SMEs : was RE: Party XML Schema Defintions At 12:09 PM 2/8/2001 -0800, Hayes, Brian wrote: It is general considered to be good architecture to seperate user interface issues from data issues: Your user friendly user interface sould not be displaying XML tag and attribute names. Absolutely! I could not agree more. It's why i wrote: "Everyone can use software to display the data with field names they can read and to provide explanations for what those field names mean." I side with those who suggest using identifiers. I feel it is a much better way than hanging our hat on natural language tags, whether English or so-called "Foreign." I don't want to repeat here all the traffic about the problems with dependence on exclusive use of natural language tags. -Original Message- From: Joaquin Miller [

45. Gesswhoto.com - Joaquin Miller/Grant Co., Or.
joaquin miller RETURNS TO CANYON CITY SUMMER OF 1907 An article by CG McIntosh,teacher, tells of being with joaquin miller on his return to visit Canyon
http://gesswhoto.com/miller.html
JOAQUIN MILLER RETURNS TO CANYON CITY - SUMMER OF 1907
An article by C.G. McIntosh, teacher, tells of being with Joaquin Miller on his return to visit Canyon City in the summer of 1907.
"If that is my cabin, I did a good job of putting on the shingles. But I should not have recognized it. Those trees are not as I planted them. There is a shirt on the line too which I know is not mine. I never had but one in those dear old days."
And then, Joaquin Miller, the Sweet Singer of the Sierras, took the photograph which he was examining into a stronger light, swept the silvery lock that dangled lower over his shoulder, adjusted his eye glasses and with his index finger, located the lines of the lowlying hills which surrounded the cabin of his early home.
A look of intense earnestness - or was it something more - shown in his face as he continued. "Yes, it's all changed here beyond recognition, but the contour of the hills seem the same forever more. This (pointing to the cabin) is my work! This, (indicating the sweep of the hills) is God's." And with a supreme reverence that thrilled speaker and hearers alike, murmured, "Holy, Holy Hills." It is given to many men to love nature, but few could interpret her secrets as did Joaquin Miller!
"See where the eternal forces are ceaselessly at work repairing the devastation of man." He observed the large area of divided upland placer land. "Nature abhors a wound, and even an open scar. She slowly but surely softens and hides them by some of her magical art. The steeper edges of this cut are already smoothing out, and hardy grasses and brave blossoms are colonizing in the scant soil of the ruins. These hills are emblems of charity."

46. Who Was Joaquin Miller?
Who was joaquin miller? joaquin miller was a colorful figure who waswell known in California literary and social circles. He spent
http://tlc.ousd.k12.ca.us/jmiller/About/miller.html
Student performance Meet the staff Who was Joaquin Miller? Who was Joaquin Miller?
Joaquin Miller was a colorful figure who was well known in California literary and social circles. He spent his last years in Oakland, in a home on the road that is now Joaquin Miller Road. But his real name the name he was given at birth on Sept. 8, 1837 was Cincinnatus Hiner. The name "Joaquin" was adapted later from the legendary California bandit, Joaquin Murietta.
Joaquin Miller's parents were Quakers. Miller's father was a magistrate in Indiana. In 1852, his parents relocated their family to Oregon, traveling with two heavily laden wagons, eight oxen yoked to each, a carriage and two horses. The three thousand mile trip took seven months and five days. The family settled in the Williamette Valley in Oregon where they established a home and farm.
Miller, while still a boy, headed to California with another boy during the early Gold Rush. He worked in a number of mining camps. He reported that he was severely wounded in a battle between the settlers near Mt. Shasta and the Modoc Indian Tribe when an arrow pierced his face and exited the back of his neck. The arrow passed close to the base of his brain. Although he eventually recovered from the wound, he suffered both physical and mental effects of the injury for at least a year. He later had little recollection of that period of time. He survived other battles with Northern California Indian groups, and had several altercations with the law over matters relating to the ownership of livestock and gun play.

47. Joaquin Miller
The Wild West in Piccadilly joaquin miller and the Performance ofPlace. miller had his second collection of poems, joaquin Et.
http://www.traverse.com/people/dot/miller_london.html
LOCAL COLOR
19th-century Regional Writing in the United States
The Wild West in Piccadilly:
Joaquin Miller and the Performance of Place
Born on the long trail to Oregon, Joaquin (Cincinnatus Hiner) Miller spent his childhood and youth in the Pacific Northwest, one of the wildest remaining parts of the country at that time. Like Bret Harte and Mark Twain, he briefly tried a number of different jobs, including a stint riding the pony express, an interval as a teacher, some time with the Indians of the Pitt River tribe (during which time he was rumored to have married a Native American woman and fathered a daughter). Finally, he spent a short period of time studying law before settling temporarily in Eugene, Oregon where he took up the editorship of a local paper and devoted himself to writing poetryhis first love throughout life.
In 1863, he and his new wife, the poet Minnie Myrtle (Theresa Dyer), honeymooned in San Francisco, hoping to break into the literary scene and remain permanently. They both were successful at placing some of their verse in the teaming journals of the Bay Area, but it is not likely that they were paid for any of their efforts. In fact, Col. Joseph Lawrence, owner-editor of the Golden Era , far from encouraging Miller, actively discouraged any further attempts; of Miller's poem "Oregon," he said that its rhymes were "as suggestively simple as a schoolboy's," and recommended that their author "cease wooing the muses and return to Oregon to grow 'taters.'"

48. Burbank USD: Schools : Joaquin Miller Elementary School
Educational facility information on student academics, dress code, policies, and contact information.Category Regional North America B Burbank Education......joaquin miller Elementary 720 East Providencia Avenue Telephone (818) 5585460Fax (818) 843-6077 Principal's email address gcopeland@admin.burbank.k12.ca
http://www.burbank.k12.ca.us/schools/joaquinmiller/
Joaquin Miller Elementary
720 East Providencia Avenue
Telephone: (818) 558-5460
Fax: (818) 843-6077
Principal's email address:
gcopeland@admin.burbank.k12.ca.us
Miller Kindergarten School
223 East Santa Anita
Telephone: (818) 558-4634 About Our School Principal's Welcome Message 2001 - 2002 School Accountability Report Card (SARC) STAR Testing Results ... SEARCH

49. Burbank USD: Schools : Joaquin Miller Elemetary : Principal's Message
Principal's Message Dear Internet Visitor Welcome to joaquin millerElementary School! miller School, a 1997 California Distinguished
http://www.burbank.k12.ca.us/schools/joaquinmiller/message.html
Principal's Message:
Dear Internet Visitor:
Welcome to Joaquin Miller Elementary School! Miller School, a 1997 California Distinguished School, is situated in the City of Burbank, a few miles north of the Los Angeles Civic Center. Burbank is a community of 100,000 residents currently undergoing a dramatic change in its economy and in the make-up of its population. The economy is improving because of the growth of the television and entertainment industry in the city and the immigrant population is expanding rapidly. As a result, many areas of the city have become very diverse and multi-ethnic.
Miller Elementary School has been the largest and fastest growing school in the District for the past decade. Our surrounding neighborhood has changed from mainly single-family dwellings to now a vast majority of multi-family dwellings. Currently, nearly 80% of our students live in these multi-family dwellings. This change, along with our moderately high mobility rate, has certainly contributed to the rapid growth of our school population, which has gone from 699 students in 1992 to a record high of 1000 students in March of 2001 to our current number of 900 students. Housing the increased student population, coupled with class-size reduction in Grades K-3, has been a challenge and resulted in the opening in 1995 of a new Miller Kindergarten facility (on a separate site six blocks away for up to 150 Kindergarten students) and the construction in 1999 of a new two-story, 28 classroom building (replacing 17 portable classrooms).

50. Joaquin Miller     Www.cowboypoetry.com                   
joaquin miller, born 1837 joaquin miller was known as a character in his day, and today his reputation is not much better. But
http://www.cowboypoetry.com/miller.htm
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Joaquin Miller , born 1837 Joaquin Miller was known as a "character" in his day, and today his reputation is not much better. But, he was an early western figure who influenced many of his time and those who came after. While his life and his writings have been subject to much criticism, he helped create some of the enduring Old West myths. When Miller couldn't find success in America, he took his show on the road to Britain and became the popular "Poet of the Sierras." It's said that he inspired Buffalo Bill's career. Miller has been called a "poseur" and "a vulgar fraud" and worse, and Bret Harte refused to publish any of his poems in his Overland Express Still, at one time his poem Columbus was known by every school child. We've included one of his poems (a love poem to one of his wives) and some links to other folks' sites that tell more about this colorful writer from our past. In Twayne's United States Authors Series , author O. W. Frost writes about one short poem:

51. Joaquin Miller
Home Recent Changes Search the Swiki Help Guide joaquin miller. thefamous notice under construction. other stuff Link to this Page.
http://pbl.cc.gatech.edu/myswiki/386
Joaquin Miller
the famous notice: under construction.
other stuff
Link to this Page
  • who's who last edited on 8 February 2003 at 6:47:43 pm by bgm-24-24-86-16.stny.rr.com

52. History Of Joaquin Miller
History of joaquin miller. Version, Name, User, Date, Time. current, joaquinmiller, w132.z064001166.sjcca.dsl.cnc.net. 11 August 2000, 63708 pm.
http://pbl.cc.gatech.edu/myswiki/386.history
History of Joaquin Miller
This document contains a history of this page, from the current version to the earliest one available. Version Name User Date Time current Joaquin Miller w132.z064001166.sjc-ca.dsl.cnc.net. 11 August 2000 6:37:08 pm Joaquin Miller 11 August 2000 6:36:13 pm

53. Bay Area Hiker: Joaquin Miller Park
View photos from this hike joaquin miller Park has terrain and vegetationsimilar to its neighbor, Sunset TrailRedwood Park, but the City of Oakland
http://www.bahiker.com/eastbayhikes/joaquinmiller.html
Joaquin Miller Park
City of Oakland,
Alameda County
Getting there
From Highway 24 in Alameda County, exit Highway 13. Drive south on Highway 13 about 3 miles, then exit Joaquin Miller Road. At the base of the exit ramp, turn left, cross over the highway, then bear right onto Joaquin Miller Road. Drive uphill about 0.8 mile, then turn left onto Sanborn Drive (look for the Woodminster sign). Drive about 0.1 mile on Sanborn Drive, and park in the lot (or along the side of the road) near the ranger station.
Details
There is a medium-sized paved lot, but many people park along the side of Sanborn Drive. Mind the no parking signs. If there is no parking inside the park, you can easily and legally park on the side of Joaquin Miller Road and walk in. No entrance or parking fees. Restrooms, pay phone, maps, and drinking water at the ranger station. There is one designated handicapped parking spot in the parking lot (which also services the Joaquin Miller Community Center), but trails here are poorly suited to wheelchairs. AC Transit bus #53 stops in front of the park.
Rules
Some trails are open to hikers, cyclists, and equestrians. There are a few closed to bikes, and some trails are signed hiking only. Dogs are permitted on leash only (but are not allowed in picnic areas). Park is open from dawn to dusk.

54. Bay Area Hiker: Photos From Joaquin Miller Park
Photos from a November 2001 hike at joaquin miller Park (click on anyimage for a larger view). Trailhead Trailhead, Route backtracks
http://www.bahiker.com/slideshows/joaquinmillerpics.html
Photos from a November 2001 hike at Joaquin Miller Park
(click on any image for a larger view)
Trailhead
Route backtracks briefly along Sanborn Drive
Gate
Junction
Sunset Trail
Sunset Trail
Trail climbs through a small dark canyon
Steep stretch
Looking back to the junction with Sunset and Sequoia Bayview Trails Sequoia Bayview Trail At a clearing along the trail, there are nice views of Oakland and San Francisco View The trail keeps to a level grade A graceful coast live oak along the trail Pines tower overhead Sequoia Bayview Trail Approaching junction with Fern Ravine Trail Looking down Fern Ravine Trail Junction with Wild Rose Trail Invasive trees line the trail Deep ruts preceed the departure of Chaparral Trail Chaparral Trail Serious erosion has left this section steep and rocky A more pleasant stretch of trail View Descending Cotoneaster, a non-native shrub with poisonous berries

55. Oregon Blue Book: Notables- Joaquin Miller
Notable Oregonians home. joaquin miller, 18371913. joaquin miller wasborn Cincinnatus Hiner miller on September 8, 1837. His parents
http://bluebook.state.or.us/notable/notmiller.htm
Notable Oregonians: Joaquin Miller- Poet/Writer
Notable Oregonians home

Joaquin Miller, 1837-1913
Joaquin Miller was born Cincinnatus Hiner Miller on September 8, 1837. His parents were Quakers and his father was a magistrate in Indiana. In 1852, the family moved to Oregon, traveling with two heavily laden wagons, eight oxen yoked to each, a carriage, and two horses. The three thousand mile trip took over seven months. They settled near Eugene, Oregon where they established a home and farm. Miller and a friend set off to California in search of gold in 1855 and subsequently worked in a number of mining camps. He reported that he was severely wounded in a battle between the settlers near Mt. Shasta and the Modoc Indians when an arrow pierced his face and exited the back of his neck. He later survived other battles with northern California Indian groups, and had several altercations with the law over matters relating to the ownership of livestock and gun play. Miller attended Columbia College in in Eugene City from 1857 to 1858. He taught school, studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1861. From 1861 to 1862 Miller rode pony express from Walla Walla to Idaho mines but he soon returned to Eugene City to become a newspaper editor. In his newspaper

56. GIGA Quote Author Page For Joaquin Miller
GIGA's compilation of quotations, excerpts, proverbs, maxims and aphorisms by joaquinmiller. GIGA QUOTES BY AUTHOR joaquin miller American poet (1839 1913),
http://www.giga-usa.com/gigaweb1/quotes2/quautmillerjoaquinx001.htm
Home Page Biographical Index Reading List Internet Links ...
Quote Links
AUTHOR LAST NAME: A B C D ... Z
TOPICS FOR QUOTES: A B C D ...
QUOTATIONS
GIGA QUOTES BY AUTHOR JOAQUIN MILLER
American poet (1839 - 1913)
BUY BOOK RELATED TO

JOAQUIN MILLER
The bravest battle that ever was fought;
Shall I tell you where and when?
On the maps of the world you will find it not;
It was fought by the mothers of men.
The Bravest BattleMothers of Men Motherhood
In men whom men condemn as ill I find so much of goodness still, In men whom men pronounce divine I find so much of sin and blot I do not dare to draw a line Between the two, where God has not. Byron (st. 1) [ Character All crush'd and stone-cast in behaviour, She stood as a marble would stand, Then the Saviour bent down, and the Saviour In silence wrote on in the sand. Charity Charity O woman, born first to believe us; Yea, also born first to forget; Born first to betray and deceive us, Yet first to repent and regret. Charity Women I throw a kiss across the sea

57. Lotos.site.uottawa.ca/ftp/pub/URN/archive/urn.20030109
from smart by minster.cs.york.ac.uk with local (Exim 4.10) id 18Whzt0005zy-00;Thu, 09 Jan 2003 190545 +0000 Reply-To joaquin miller joaquin@acm.org
http://lotos.site.uottawa.ca/ftp/pub/URN/archive/urn.20030109
From owner-urn@site.uottawa.ca Thu Jan 9 15:21:52 2003 Received: (from majordom@localhost) by mail.site.uottawa.ca (8.9.3/8.9.3) id PAA22800 for urn-list; Thu, 9 Jan 2003 15:21:52 -0500 (EST) Received: from site.uottawa.ca (infocf.site.uottawa.ca [137.122.91.185]) by mail.site.uottawa.ca (8.9.3/8.9.3) with ESMTP id PAA22787; Thu, 9 Jan 2003 15:21:42 -0500 (EST) Message-ID: Date: Thu, 09 Jan 2003 15:21:41 -0500 From: Daniel Amyot Received: from minster.cs.york.ac.uk (minster.cs.york.ac.uk [144.32.40.2]) by mail.site.uottawa.ca (8.9.3/8.9.3) with ESMTP id OAA17135 for ; Thu, 9 Jan 2003 14:06:18 -0500 (EST) Received: from smart by minster.cs.york.ac.uk with local (Exim 4.10) id 18Whzt-0005zy-00; Thu, 09 Jan 2003 19:05:45 +0000 Reply-To: Joaquin Miller Message-Id: X-Sender: miller%joaquin.net@pop3.joaquin.net X-Mailer: QUALCOMM Windows Eudora Version 5.1 Date: Thu, 09 Jan 2003 11:04:50 -0800 To: pUML From: Joaquin Miller

58. Literature Of Mount Shasta: Joaquin Miller
While goldmining in the 1850s, joaquin miller spent a few years inthe Mount Shasta area. His subsequent writings offer a vibrant
http://www.siskiyous.edu/shasta/lit/joa.htm
Literature
Joaquin Miller
While goldmining in the 1850s, Joaquin Miller spent a few years in the Mount Shasta area. His subsequent writings offer a vibrant portrayal of our early mining camps, the interactions between the whites and Native Americans, the beauty of the mountain, and the rich game to be found locally. Of course, just how much fact he mixed with fiction is open to question. Referring to Miller's Life Amongst the Modocs , Wells' 1881 History of Siskiyou County complains that Miller has taken all the leading events of Northern California, most of which happened long before he appeared there, made himself the central figure, distorted the facts, and given them to the world as a truthful account of the dealings of the white men with the Indians. Whether literally true, true only in spirit, or even a mix of imagination and observation, his work is often inspiring and always worth reading. Miller's Life Amongst the Modocs: Unwritten History would, as Miesse points out, perhaps be better named "Life Amongst the Wintu," or "Life Amongst the Shasta." Still, the work includes two chapters that concern the mountain: Chapter 1, " Shadows of Shasta ," and Chapter 19, " The Indians' Account of the Creation While most of Miller's local writings remain centered on the local Native Americans, Miller was also quite capable of discussing the wealth of local game. In "

59. Burbank, California Joaquin Miller Kindergarten
joaquin miller Kindergarten 223 E. Santa Anita Avenue, Burbank, Ca 91502Hours 730 AM 400 PM. Phone 818.558.4634 Fax 818.843.6077.
http://www.burbank.acityline.com/schools/about_jmk.html
Joaquin Miller
Kindergarten
223 E. Santa Anita Avenue, Burbank, Ca 91502 Hours:
7:30 AM - 4:00 PM Phone:
Fax:
A CALIFORNIA DISTINGUISHED SCHOOL
Miller School reflects the recent changes in the population and economy of the City of Burbank perhaps more than any other elementary school in the District. Currently the student population of approximately 900 Kindergarten - Grade 5 students is 29.2% Hispanic, 3.6% Black, 4.7% Asian, 2% Filipino and 62% White. Approximately one-third of students identified as White are of Mid-Eastern ethnicity. Our language census shows an even greater diversity. In March of 1997, 651 or 72% of the students spoke a language other than English. Armenian, Spanish, Korean and Arabic were the highest in number of the 21 languages listed. 227 students (25%) were classified FEP (Fluent English Proficient) while 424 (47%) were LEP (Limited English Proficient). We welcome and embrace the broad cultural and ethnic diversity and feel that it is a strength of our school. While pursuing academic excellence, there is also a high regard for respecting and preserving the traditions of all cultures as well as identifying and fostering common values that unite all people. We believe that our students are benefiting from this rich and varied learning environment. The Miller tradition includes a dedicated staff, community involvement, high expectations, and a strong academic curriculum. Our goals for students focus on literacy and math. Students are actively engaged every day in learning activities which build speaking, reading, writing, and problem solving skills in meaningful context. Our goal for LEP students is competence in English. In addition, we believe all students will acquire social and critical thinking skills needed for responsible citizenship in a democratic society. Miller School is a school where students and staff want to be. Our attendance is significantly high (95%), verifying that students like coming to school each day to learn. Parents choose to have their children attend Miller School, even when they have the opportunity to transfer to other schools. Each and every day

60. Joaquin Miller Park
Situated in the Oakland Hills, joaquin miller Park contains one ofthe only Urban Second Growth Redwood Groves in existence. Since
http://www.mtbca.com/joaquinmiller.html
Home Parks Races Map ... Gear Joaquin Miller Park
Oakland, CA BIG TREES LOOP NOVEMBER 9, 2001 CINDERELLA LOOP JANUARY 12, 2002 JOAQUIN MILLER PARK LAKE CHABOT REGIONAL PARK REDWOOD REGIONAL PARK ... TILDEN / WILDCAT CANYON REGIONAL PARK Situated in the Oakland Hills, Joaquin Miller Park contains one of the only Urban Second Growth Redwood Groves in existence. Since the Save the Redwoods League donated the Redwood Grove to the city of Oakland in 1928, it has been extensively used by a multitude of user groups including: Scouts, picnickers, hikers, motorcyclists, day campers, bird watchers, naturalists, bicyclists, dog-walkers and joggers. Still, despite being held hostage by its geographical location right at the edge of an urban area that now includes over six million people, the park retains much of its natural beauty, health, vitality, and majesty. Unfortunately a recent proposal to ban bikes from the park has rekindled the age-old dispute over equal access. So, please, follow all of the proper biking rules. This site is always being added to. If you have any suggestions, or would just like to contact me, you can send me an e-mail and I will get back to you very soon.

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