Can North Face millionaires’ gift to Stanford help preserve nature?

Kris Tompkins and her late husband, Douglas Tompkins — renowned conservationist, founder of The North Face and cofounder of Esprit — overcame controversy and adversity to to save a Patagonian paradise.

Now others can learn how they did it.

In a major gift to Stanford University Libraries, the couple’s archives will reveal the personalities and politics that led to the astonishing creation or expansion of 15 national parks, protecting 14.8 million acres of land and 30 million acres of ocean in Argentina and Chile.

The materials, now being shipped to campus for scholars to study, “are a prototype for others to consider as we try to do more conservation in more places around the world,” said Stanford librarian Michael Keller.

“They show us the way, in both tactical details and strategic directions, to convince governments to invest more in conservation — and to understand the benefits both to their citizenry and also the climate,” he said.

Donated by the nonprofit Tompkins Conservation, the archives come as environmentalists race to confront the global crises of climate change and biodiversity loss.

“We hope they will inspire brilliant students from all fields to work for a more wild, equitable, and beautiful planet,” said Kristine McDivitt Tompkins, the former CEO of the outdoor-apparel company Patagonia, in a statement.

The conservation efforts by Doug and Kris were initially met with fierce local opposition and suspicion.

Doug fell in love with Patagonia in the early 1960s during a backpacking trip through South America. Chile is heavily dependent on oil drilling and logging, which put the landscape at risk — and he wanted it saved.

Leaving their corporate careers behind, they devoted all their savings to buying parcels of land — hundreds of thousands of acres at a time — and removed livestock, fencing and invasive species, sometimes using intermediaries to avoid price inflation.

Kris and Doug Tompkins, the former CEO of Patagonia and late co-founder of The North Face, overcame fierce opposition and suspicion to protect about 14.8 million acres of wilderness in Chile and Argentina. Their archives have been donated to Stanford University Libraries for future research on environmental policy, conservation, philanthropy, and environmental activism. (Courtesy of Tompkins Family Archives) 

The vision was to create national parks — on the scale of Yosemite, Yellowstone or Grand Teton — that would be gifted to the Chilean and Argentine governments. Their holdings included the 726,488-acre Pumalín Park, the world’s largest private nature reserve.

But wildland philanthropy was unknown in Latin America, and their acquisition of land on this scale was not welcomed. Some saw it as land grab by foreigners.  Others suspected ulterior motives, such as control of the region’s water, minerals and other natural resources.

Doug died in 2015 of severe hypothermia after a kayaking accident in Chile. He and five others — including Yvon Chouinard, founder of the Patagonia clothing company — were on a week-long trip when gusting winds and fierce waves overturned his boat on Lago General Carrera, a lake separating Chile from Argentina.

Yet Kris doubled down on conservation efforts, tapping into her managerial instincts to collaborate with the government, local communities, scientists and other philanthropists to keep projects moving forward.

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