Background
Born March 18, 1927, Johnson grew up in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, but spent much of his boyhood on family farms in Dodge and Buffalo counties, hunting and fishing.
Born March 18, 1927, Johnson grew up in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, but spent much of his boyhood on family farms in Dodge and Buffalo counties, hunting and fishing.
He graduated from Nathan Hale High School in West Allis, then served with the United States. Navy in combat forces in the South Pacific during World World War World War II He attended the University of Wisconsin in Madison, where he studied conservation and journalism and where he met Aldo Leopold.
His career included nature writing, investigative reporting on environmental issues, and traditional outdoor writing about hunting, fishing, and related pursuits. After graduating, he worked for several newspapers in northern Wisconsin and Minnesota. In 1962, Johnson joined the The Milwaukee Sentinel as the newspaper"s outdoor writer, a post he held until 1984.
During those years, Johnson reported on hunting, fishing, and wildlife throughout Wisconsin.
He also reported on conservation issues, including an exposé of mercury pollution in the Wisconsin River and a series on pesticide pollution. In 1966, Johnson wrote a series of investigative reports about high concentrations of DDT in state waters.
Despite threats of lawsuits and demands by chemical companies that he be fired, Johnson kept pursuing environmental stories. The series played a key role in making Wisconsin the first state to ban DDT, which ultimately led to a national ban.
Johnson also took notes on his nature hikes, which he crafted into vignettes, many published in the Milwaukee Sentinel during the years that he worked as outdoor writer for that newspaper.
In November 2005, a collection of his nature essays was published, titled Summer"s Song and Other Essays. Johnson left the Sentinel in 1984, but continued to write, freelancing articles and photographs to magazines. He published a 1995 book Grouse & Woodcock: A Gunner"s Guide.
Johnson was an adventurer who hiked, hunted, fished, and photographed in such far-flung places as Africa, Cuba, the Andes, the Amazon, Mexico, the Yukon, and Alaska.
Johnson died on January 20, 2006, after a struggle with both Parkinson"s disease and cancer. 1961 - Gordon MacQuarrie Award "Foreign Telling the Conservation Story".
Made an honorary life member of the Outdoor Communications Association "in recognition of a lifetime of service to Wisconsin"s outdoors".