Marshall T. Savage: Difference between revisions
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==Marriage and family== | ==Marriage and family== | ||
By 1995 he was married to [[Tami Savage]] and had | By 1995 he was married to [[Tami Savage]] and had likely adopted her two children: | ||
* Jeff Savage (born 1983) | * Jeff Savage (born 1983) | ||
* Matt Savage (born 1986) | * Matt Savage (born 1986) | ||
* Dyson A. Savage (likely named after Freeman Dyson), born 1996 | |||
He also had a child by Tami: | |||
* Dyson A. Savage (likely named after Freeman Dyson), born early 1996 | |||
==''The Millennial Project''== | ==''The Millennial Project''== | ||
Revision as of 08:09, 8 August 2018

Marshall Thomas Savage (born 6 August 1955) has lived for many years as part of a notable family in Rifle, Colorado.
Early life
The Savage family is very active in the development of natural gas, real estate, water, timber, and wind power.
See main article: Savage Family of Rifle, Colorado
Savage was born 6 August 1955 to John Savage Sr. and Joan Leonhardt, the third of four sons.
In 1963, John and Joan Savage moved their family of four sons to Graham Mesa in Rifle from Grand Valley.
He attended Swarthmore College. [1] He also holds an English degree from the University of Southern California. [2] [3]
Marriage and family
By 1995 he was married to Tami Savage and had likely adopted her two children:
- Jeff Savage (born 1983)
- Matt Savage (born 1986)
He also had a child by Tami:
- Dyson A. Savage (likely named after Freeman Dyson), born early 1996
The Millennial Project

From 1988 to about 2000, he was a prominent member of the tech futurist community, especially after the publication in 1992 of his book, The Millennial Project (TMP).
TMP was first published in 1992 by Denver publisher Empyrean Publishing.
In 1994, now-defunct publishing house Little, Brown & Company published a reprinting.
TMP discusses an expansive vision of the future for humanity, a utopian vision where men live among the stars in space colonies.
TMP was praised by Arthur C. Clarke, one of the leading science fiction writers of the era and President of the National University of Sri Lanka, for Savage's "command of a dozen engineering disciplines and his amazing knowledge of scientific and technical literature."
In the late 1980s futurist author Marshall Savage published what is perhaps the most comprehensive space development and colonization plan ever proposed. Dubbed The Millennial Project (or TMP for short) and detailed in a book of the same name, this millennium-spanning plan set out in colorful detail every major step of human civilization's progression into space, from the cultivation of a new space-focused society and the establishment of a terrestrial renewable energy and industrial infrastructure to drive the initial expansion into space all the way through to the creation of a vast Solar Civilization based predominately on orbital settlements with a collective population of trillions and culminating in the first missions to colonize neighboring stars.
— Eric Hunting, circa 2009 [4]

The book features inspiring, dreamlike art by artist Keith Spangle. [5] He worked closely with Savage to ensure the artwork hewed closely to Savage's vision:
My involvement and Marshal's depended on the specific illustration. On many of them, Marshall would give me a general idea of what he wanted, then let me do the rest. If I had what I thought was a really cool idea, I would do a fairly detailed color sketch and show it to him. Other times, Marshall had a very specific idea in mind and closely watched and corrected what I was doing. On many of the color illustrations what he wanted was something that would illustrate the idea rather than what the actual thing would look like: the illustration of the endlessly repeated golden spheres is a case in point. It was meant to illustrate the IDEA of a space based society rather than what such a society would actually look like (you probably would not be able to see your closest neighbor). Doing these illustrations was slow and a lot of work, since this was pre-digital. I suspect that with a team of digital artists, Marshall could have produced the book in half the time, and probably would have gotten even better results.
— Keith Spangle, 2017. Private correspondence with Michael Currie.
This book was highly influential on the thinking of a generation of young scientists and visionairies, including entrepreneur Michael Currie and others.
The First Millennial Foundation
See main article: The First Millennial Foundation.
In 1988, Marshall Savage founded the First Millennial Foundation, a Colorado-based organization dedicated to promoting the colonization of space. The basic building blocks that he lays out for this grand mission -- extraordinary transport systems, self-sustaining space cities and terraformed planets -- are not fully his own visions, but he explains them in detail in the TMP book.
By January 1995, Savage had an assistant, Theresa Hamilton [6], and TMP had 700 people on their mailing list and 150 memberships, according to correspondence with future Red Hat Senior Patent Counsel David Perry, then a sophomore student at Whitemore College [7] [8]
Sometime around 1999, Savage stepped into an advisory role, and about 2 years later, left the organization completely.
It eventually was renamed the Living Universe Foundation (LUF). [9] As of July 2018, the Facebook page for LUF has 1,114 "likes".
For about ten years, Eric Hunting made intellectual contributions to the LUF in the form of a "TMP2" wiki-driven successor to the original book:
Though starting with a promising and rapidly growing community, the FMF ran into critical trouble when Marshal Savage abandoned his own brainchild and his career as a futurist around the turn of the century, supposedly because of interpersonal conflicts with some of the 'core' members of the original FMF. This was followed by a rift in the community between supporters of the original scheme and a more Libertarian influenced faction that sought to abandon the marine phase of development as a distraction in the belief that we were entering a new commercial space race with the advent of the Lockheed VentureStar --a notion that proved very premature. I spent about a decade seeking to revive the organization, eventually becoming president by default and cultivating the wiki project TMP2 [10] in an attempt to update TMP to more contemporary technology and futurist thought, create a Sourceforge-like project development forum, and seek the creation of new futurist media. However, for some ten years, I was the only person who ever contributed significantly to the project.
— Eric Hunting, private email correspondence, 2017
Hunting goes on to reflect on how TMP typified several trends: the rise of the Internet as a force for social organization, and the fading of the space-advocacy community as a serious driver of technological development.
Marshal Savage was originally a strong believer in the potential of the Internet as a catalyst for global social action. But the space advocacy movement was already in a decline at the time the FMF was founded, the original founders of the movement retreating into the formal space establishment and relegating the movement to a non-participatory role, a haven for establishment outcasts like Robert Zubrin, and a growing infiltration by purveyors of New Age and SciFi inspired psuedo-science, conspiracy theory, and radical Libertarianism. Instead of catalyzing action, the Internet created increasingly sheltered echo-chambers that cultivated increasing cladification of the movement into ever smaller, more ineffectual, groups pursuing their own pet 'magic bullets' for space's challenges. People with actual science and engineering backgrounds were progressively driven off until little more than a bunch of SciFi fans remained.
— Eric Hunting, private email correspondence, 2017
Eric was interviewed 8 May 2011 by David M. Livingston for his show, "The Space Show" [11] [12]
Savage withdrew from the futurist community from 1999 to 2001. His last contribution appears to be a short article for Wired Magazine, on 1 July 2001, entitled "The Moon Base Race" [13]
Since that date he has given no interview nor made any contribution to the futurist community.
Career
As of 2018 he is Vice President, Technology Development at Independent Energy Partners (IEPM) [14]
On their website his biography states:
Marshall Savage was born with a visionary and innovative mind that he applies across broad entrepreneurial experience in a variety of fields including energy development. He is the inventor of Geothermic Fuel Cells and is responsible for primary technology development. This includes ongoing patent applications, design refinement, and prototype development. Mr. Savage was the founder and President of West Anvil Water & Power Company, which was established to develop the Webster Hill reservoir and hydropower project on the Colorado River. Mr. Savage joined a co-venture with the Shale Energy Corporation of America to develop an oil shale project on lands owned by the Savage family. The Savage family is very active in the development of natural gas, real estate, water, timber, and wind power. Mr. Savage continues to participate in all of these activities on a limited basis.
— Independent Energy Partners
References in media
In 1996, he was featured in Future Fantastic, a BBC show narrated by Gillian Anderson. [15] [16]
In 1999, Savage was one of three visionaries discussed in the documentary, "Space Colonies: Living Among the Stars", produced by David Hickman [17] for the Discovery Channel. It was later packaged as part 54 of The Discovery Channel's "The Cosmos: The Ultimate Space Collection".
Producer David Hickman [18] is now as of 2018 Senior Lecturer in Film & Television Production, University of York.
See main article: Reviews of The Millennial Project
Sources
The Millennial Project: Colonising the Galaxy in Eight Easy Steps Author - Marshall T. Savage ISBN - 0 316 77163 5 Publisher - Little, Brown & Co Price - £11.99 Pages - 508
"Go Up, Young Man," by Marcia Bartusiak. Washington Post, 8 January 1995. [19]
Docuwiki [20]
The Millennial Project Revisited: a Book Review, by Jeff Fullerton. The Libertarian Enterprise, Number 822, 17 May 2015. [21]
TMP2, by Eric Hunting [22]
LUF Facebook Page [23]