RIP GGNRA Superintendent O'Neill

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From the redwood forests of the Phleger Estate in San Mateo County to Alcatraz to the Marin Headlands, millions of people every year enjoy the natural splendor of the Bay Area's pre-eminent national park, the Golden Gate National Recreation Area.
But behind the 75,500-acre park for nearly a quarter-century was a soft-spoken ranger, a lover of the outdoors who devoted his career not only to opening some of Northern California's finest landscapes to the public, but redefining what a national park could be.
On Wednesday, following complications from a heart attack, Brian O'Neill, superintendent of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, died. He was 67.
From the redwood forests of the Phleger Estate in San Mateo County to Alcatraz to the Marin Headlands, millions of people every year enjoy the natural splendor of the Bay Area's pre-eminent national park, the Golden Gate National Recreation Area.
But behind the 75,500-acre park for nearly a quarter-century was a soft-spoken ranger, a lover of the outdoors who devoted his career not only to opening some of Northern California's finest landscapes to the public, but redefining what a national park could be.
On Wednesday, following complications from a heart attack, Brian O'Neill, superintendent of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, died. He was 67.