Caroline Sealy Livermore

Caroline Sealy Livermore (7 August 1883 – 2 February 1968)[1] was an American conservationist with emphasis in environment planning and protection.

She pursued her conservation efforts over a period of 15 years where she interacted with national and state level lawmakers.

[5][3] Her husband was also represented on many corporate boards and in the Marin Republican Party central committee.

[3] In the 1930s, Livermore took up the matter of conservation of Marin County by first pursuing stoppage of the degradation of the slopes of Mount Tamalpais which acted as an important watershed.

She established the Marin Conservation League, which she spearheaded for twenty years, with objective to prepare and implement a "green, open-space county master plan" relevant to the post-World War II period in the Bay Area.