A leader of the first wave of environmental activists and agitators in Bastrop County beginning in the late 1970s, Margaret Campbell Bamberger, 70, died at her Bamberger Ranch home near Johnson City on March 6, after a struggle of more than four years with lung cancer.
She was much more than an activist. She nurtured her own three children and many others over the decades. “She was like a second mother to me,” said one of my sons, Reuben McAuley, who came to know her in the mid 1970s. She was also a gifted photographer, an artist, acclaimed teacher and generous soul.
When Lower Colorado River Authority officials announced plans (early in 1979, I believe) to lease almost 6,500 acres at Camp Swift to strip mine deposits of soft coal for electric generating fuel, Margaret was among the first handful of local folks to step forward as volunteers to organize opposition efforts either to halt the project or minimize its poetntially harmful effects. That early group, known as the Central Texas Lignite Watch, was the mother of later efforts on other environmental fronts including work undertaken by the Bastrop County Environmental Network, Neighbors for Neighbors and related organizations.
When LCRA plans to mine Camp Swift came to grief about two years later–for reasons only partly related to CTLW efforts–the agency shifted its focus to creating an even larger mining effort in Fayette County, but Margaret and her colleagues followed that plan as well and quickly stirred up local opposition there to reinforce the critics. By that time CTLW had also linked up with environmental activists in Austin who helped persuade that city council to back away from an increasingly complex, costly and environmentally questionable enterprise.
Also during the early 80s other facets of Margaret’s talent began to emerge, including photography and drawing, along with a deepening understanding of the natural world and how it works. Most early issues of the Bulletin of the Sayersville Historical Society, a local history group from central Bastrop County, were illuminated by her work, including technical illustrations such as prehistoric stone projectile points and later archaeological artifacts from the area. Perhaps she reached her largest audience with the illustrations for Water from Stone, The Story of Selah, Bamberger Ranch Preserve (Texas A&M University Press, 2007). Margaret married J. David Bamberger in 1998 and spent the rest of her life with him at the ranch preserve near Johnson City. She also produced a wonderful series of hand-colored prints based on many of those same illustrations.
Ave atque vale, Margaret. We will not see your like again.
Her last public appearance, I believe, was Feb. 22 at a reception in her honor at a gallery and sculpture ranch just west of Johnson City. It was thronged with friends and family, including a number from the Bastrop area. A memorial service in her honor was also held in Austin on March 28
She is survived by her husband; a sister, Mary Greene; three children, Chris Campbell of Austin, Margie Crisp and Franny Sharp of Elgin; and a number of grandchildren.