Shelton Johnson鈥檚 life has been characterized by three awakenings鈥攎oments听when the places where you live and sleep and eat play second fiddle to what the soul is singing. Without his听third awakening, he wouldn鈥檛 be who he is now, at age 60: an , high-profile ranger听in Yosemite who鈥檚 spoken about diversity in the national parks , gotten Oprah to next to California鈥檚听Merced River, and become one of the most visible activists for getting more听people of color into听the outdoors. But without the first awakening, he wouldn鈥檛 have gotten to the second, then to the third. So we have to start at the beginning.
The German town of Berchtesgaden sits in the Bavarian Alps, 2,297 feet above sea level. In 1963, at the outcrop of a 2,000-foot drop, here stood five-year-old Johnson on a family trip, holding his father鈥檚 left hand in his right, and his mother鈥檚 right in his left. Clouds floated below听his feet, and their shadows were mottled maps of the sky in the valley below. All around him were snow-covered peaks, with banners of wind听unfurling from their mountains, like a rug being snapped and shaken out. Johnson gripped his parents鈥 hands tighter, for fear he鈥檇 be scooped up and spit into the abyss, a brown boy vanishing into all that white. 听
On that day, the wind didn鈥檛 just blow around Johnson but through him, to a part of himself he previously didn鈥檛 know was there. He calls it a 鈥渂aptism of spirit鈥: in that instant, he felt听like听his molecules were taken out, swirled with the air, and rearranged听so that he鈥檇 forever be aligned with these environments and yearn for them. 鈥淚 had no idea at the time it was going to be the most significant moment in my childhood,鈥 Johnson says.
The听experience stayed with him when he returned from that听vacation to the German village of Contwig, where his family听lived for a year and a half while his father was in the Air Force. He would remember it after听his family moved to London, in 1964;听and听when, in 1967, his father鈥檚 job brought them back听to inner-city Detroit, where he would spend the remainder of his adolescence.听
When Johnson, at age 25, arrived in Liberia to teach seventh-grade English in the Peace Corps听in 1982, the country was in a period of transition following听the 1980 听of听president听William Tolbert.听Johnson鈥檚 post was听the village of Kakata, where he worked at听the Booker Washington Institute, the country鈥檚 first agricultural and vocational school. At the time, the institute was smaller than it is now, with a few dormitory-style rooms and one main dining听area. But what moved Johnson were the forests surrounding the village,听green no matter which direction you threw a stone.听 听
Though Johnson is currently eligible to retire, he says he鈥檚 not quite ready. There are still communities he wants to reach听and people he wants to speak with.
All around Johnson were birds for which he had no name, singing songs he鈥檇 never heard. There were spiders the size of a hand with outstretched fingers, which made him feel like he was in a big-bug science-fiction movie from the 1950s. Never before or since has听Johnson ever experienced a place like it, a place where you could听run your hand over a surface鈥攁 leaf slick with rain, a branch bruised by time鈥攁nd leave with something that wasn鈥檛 there before. A living organism or two, sure, but more importantly, a feeling. Like something good is hitching a ride and you just don鈥檛 mind. 鈥淚t was hot, humid, equatorial, and everything was alive,鈥 he says of that period.听
Johnson left Liberia months after he鈥檇 arrived, stricken by amoebic dysentery and malaria. But he still thinks of red Kakata sunsets and of this second immersion into wilderness. His听second awakening.
Johnson first saw the splendor of the U.S. national parks as a child in Detroit, thumbing through issues of听National Geographic听at home, flipping听from Yellowstone to Yosemite to the Grand Canyon and back again. Later, in his twenties, he鈥檇 click through slides of these parks on a View-Master, transported to places he could see听but still had yet to visit.
One day in 1984, as a graduate student in poetry at the University of Michigan, Johnson took a break from writing and reading and thinking about听Langston Hughes, John Keats,听and Percy Bysshe Shelley and听applied for a job that would change the arc of his life. What he signed up for鈥攖o be a dishwasher at Yellowstone鈥檚 Old Faithful Inn鈥攚as more grime than glamour. But it would bring him to the wide-open wilderness of the U.S., which he hadn鈥檛 yet experienced. When he first stepped off the bus in the park, there was that scene again: mountains covered in snow, and听wind blowing off gusts and dusts. There was that feeling听again,听like when a chord is struck on an instrument听and you feel the reverberations in your chest, blood, and bones.听
Johnson calls this his third awakening. In that moment, he realized that Detroit, to some degree, had never been his home. It was where his family was, but the wilderness鈥攚hen it鈥檚 quiet enough to hear the clouds drift by鈥攚as where he belonged. And since听getting off the bus in Yellowstone, he鈥檚 never truly gotten back on again. He went back to Michigan to pack his things, yes, but he returned to the mountains and the wind, and he鈥檚 been there, figuratively,听ever since.听
Initially, Johnson didn鈥檛 think he was qualified to be a park ranger. He could do it, of course, but with a background in classical music, poetry, and literature, he puzzled over how to听apply his formal training to everyday tasks. What would he say? 鈥淚f I catch you speeding again, I鈥檓 going to read you one of Shakespeare鈥檚 sonnets鈥攎aybe one he got rid of,鈥澨he likes to joke. But George Robinson, chief of interpretation at Yellowstone from 1982 to 1992, when Johnson was there, recognized that people鈥檚 first entry point to parks was often via the written word听or听photos or paintings. So why not hire a poet?听
And so, in 1987, Johnson began his life as a ranger, first at听Yellowstone, then at Grand Teton, then at parks in the Washington, D.C., area, and then at Great Basin National Park. For the past 25 years, he鈥檚 worked at Yosemite, opening and closing the visitor center, leading nature walks, talking about the ecology of black bears, and helping people听get closer to the heart of the place听however they can. In听March, he started focusing his efforts, full-time, on outreach to culturally diverse communities.
Years ago, Johnson was deep in the Yosemite archives when he discovered a faded black-and-white photograph from 1899 that showed five black U.S. Army infantry soldiers. He听continued to research military and historical records, building his knowledge about these Buffalo Soldiers, African American troops who were also the original stewards of national parks like Yosemite and Sequoia at the turn of the 20th century, long before there were rangers in these spaces. In addition to evicting poachers and extinguishing forest fires, the Buffalo Soldiers were building the first road into Sequoia鈥檚听Giant Forest听and constructing the first trail to the top of Mount Whitney, also in Sequoia National Park.听鈥淎frican Americans听have a role here听and have a history here,鈥 he says.

In Johnson鈥檚 mind, there鈥檚 no greater story in the national parks than that of the Buffalo Soldiers.听This history became a fulcrum of听his work in moving the deadweight of misperception, the idea that African Americans have no claim or connection to the national parks. It inspired him to write his 2011 novel听, which tells the story of a sharecropper鈥檚 son who becomes a Buffalo Soldier in the 1900s.听In 2012, Johnson started听a weekly narrative听podcast called ,听told from the perspective of听Sergeant Elizy Boman, who served in Yosemite from 1903 to 1904.听(The podcast is currently on hiatus.) Johnson, in character as Boman, still sometimes appears in Yosemite.听
Behind these calls for engagement is a hope that people of color will seek out natural spaces and continue to be inspired by them to create. Where are the听African听American landscape photographers? Johnson wonders. Why don鈥檛 more African American poets and novelists set their stories in environments like this? 鈥淭he history is there. But the modern-day equivalent of the extension of those stories and contributions is not here,鈥 Johnson says. 鈥淎nd that really troubles me.鈥
Like John Muir before him, Johnson sees himself as carrying a torch鈥攐ne that lets African Americans see that he鈥檚 there and celebrating the place, because he thinks these spaces are where disassociation from wildness can be remedied. He feels a responsibility, because only some 6 percent of all National Park Service employees are black, and because that people of color visit the national parks much less frequently than white people. By staying put and speaking, leading, and welcoming, maybe he can help.听
鈥淪helton is 100 percent accurate when he says that representation matters,鈥 says Teresa Baker, who worked with Johnson to retrace the Buffalo Soldier Trail and founded the Facebook group in 2013. 鈥淯nderstanding that there鈥檚 someone there in the visitor听center that looks like them or speaks their language,听that will be a huge help in pushing visitation when it comes to communities of color in our parks.鈥
Decades after his dishwasher gig听that summer in Yellowstone, Johnson is one of the park service鈥檚 most popular rangers, made more recognizable largely thanks to his turn in filmmaker Ken Burns鈥檚 six-episode 2009 series on PBS, . Johnson appeared in every part听of the 12-hour program, discussing everything from being greeted by bison upon his arrival in Yellowstone and听the democracy of national parks.听
According to Kara Stella, Yosemite鈥檚 deaf-services coordinator, who has worked with Johnson for more than 20 years and is currently his office mate: 鈥淰ery often, his shift [in the field]听will end听but it will be quite a while before he ends up back in the office. And I鈥檓 pretty sure, when that happens, that he has been caught by someone who is starstruck and wants to take a photo, or a visitor that asks him a question. But he is so present to the visitor that鈥檚 there.鈥 Ben Cunningham-Summerfield, another Yosemite ranger, says: 鈥淪helton takes great joy in sharing that history and his experience with those who care to listen.鈥
Though Johnson is currently eligible to retire, he says he鈥檚 not quite ready. There are still communities he wants to reach听and people he wants to speak with. But when it does happen, it will be a loss on a grand scale, say Johnson鈥檚 friends, coworkers, and peers,听not only because he鈥檚 such a talent and person of good heart听but also because no one else is doing the work he鈥檚 doing.
鈥淗e鈥檚 keeping alive a narrative that had widely been forgotten and untold for almost a century. To my knowledge, there鈥檚 no one being groomed to take his place. If he goes away, that could stop. And that would be tragic,鈥 says journalist James Edward Mills, whose 2014 documentary听听was narrated by Johnson. 鈥淪helton is a national treasure.鈥澨
For now, though听he sometimes dreams of trips to France, Italy, and Spain, Johnson is happy where he is, in a place he first discovered decades ago and knew he belonged听decades before that. 鈥淢y home is where the mountains are, and that鈥檚 why I鈥檓 here,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hat fires the imagination of my spirit are places like this.鈥