2009 Historical Edition
Transcription
2009 Historical Edition
Thursday, June 18, 2009 Lovell Historical Section Horsemen on the Ground Cowley resident Gene Nunn was one of the first to take on wild horse management By Brad Devereaux Things were different in the early days of managing the Pryor Mountain Wild Horse Range. When the range was established in 1968, it was the first of its kind in the country, the Bureau of Land Management’s first attempt at managing a public wild horse herd. Management was made official in 1971 with the passage of the Wild Horse and Burro Act, which required the protection, management and control of wild, free-roaming horses and burros on public land. In the early days of the PMWHR, there was a lot of experimentation to see what would work to manage the population of wild horses. Gene Nunn, 72, of Cowley was among the first group of men to attempt wild horse management. A rancher throughout his life, Nunn answered a newspaper ad and took a job for the BLM in the early 1970s as the head of gathering operations and on-the-ground management for the Pryor herd. His job also entailed observing and collecting data about the herd, making recommendations for the herd management plan, assembling crews for horse gathers and organizing adoptions of Pryor horses in states throughout the West. When the BLM called for a gather to bring the herd count within the appropriate management level, which was 75 to 125 horses at the time, Nunn assembled a crew of local riders. Less than a dozen men on horseback drove groups of horses from various parts of the horse range into permanent trap locations, which consisted of gated pens built with metal panels or trees lashed to posts with jute. Nunn said most horses were taken from locations high on the mountain to pens at lower elevations. Men on horseback rode ahead and were stationed along the route to direct the wild horses as they made their way down the rough canyon terrain of the range. Airplanes were used to spot herd movements before and during gathers, using radios to communicate to horsemen on the ground, Nunn said. The crew traveled with small groups of horses of three to six head and traveled 20 to 30 miles per day, Nunn said. He estimated the crews could gather more than 70 horses in two weeks. Horses that met the criteria for removal were adopted locally and shipped off to adoption sales in Nevada and California. During gather operations, many branded horses were discovered living on the range, Nunn said. If claimed, the branded horses went back to their rightful owners. If they weren’t claimed, branded horses were turned over to the Tilletts, who had an agreement with the BLM. Other “stray horses” found on the range were given to the state, later to be sold, Nunn said. Nunn credits Wild Horse Annie and others for bringing the idea of management of horse herds into the public light. He said Rev. Floyd Schwieger “really pushed the BLM” for management of the PMWHR. “He could see that the Pryor Mountain horse was a special horse,” he said, “and still is today through management.” Aside from keeping the herd stocked only with Pryor Mountain horses and not strays from outside the range, another important function of management and removal of horses is the effect on rangeland health, Nunn said. If the herd was allowed to grow unchecked, the well-adapted wild horses would strip the land bare, rendering it unable to support the many different animals that currently share the range. Nunn was joined by a talented horseman a few years into his time with the Pryor herd. Lynne Taylor, who died in March of 2008 at the age of 73, was one of Nunn’s regular range technicians and the two of them worked well together. In 1976, Taylor took over Nunn’s position in charge of gather operations. Nunn moved to California to work at an adoption Gene Nunn rides along with a Pryor mustang at Big Coulee trap in the Pryor Mountain Wild Horse Range in the 1970s. Horse gathers were carried out on horseback until the BLM began using helicopters in the area sometime after 2000. facility. He remained with the BLM for several more years, working mostly in California and at regional adoptions until his retirement. “A lot of experience gained here was spread throughout the bureau,” he said, pointing out other employees who brought their knowledge to branches in Utah and Nevada. Throughout his involvement with the BLM, Nunn said there were many people who didn’t want the horses managed in a particular way or were against any interference with the wild horse herd. He said he wouldn’t miss the politics of the position, but added that his supervisor, Rex Cleary, took the brunt of political pressure targeted at herd management. Many times, he said, gathers were put on hold or plans had to be redrafted because of a court order filed by protesters. “Mixing the survival of live animals with politics just doesn’t work,” Nunn said. In 1977, the BLM approved the use of helicopters to herd horses but they weren’t used on the Pryor range until about 2000. Nunn said the use of helicopters has made horse gathers faster, but at the cost of more trauma for the horses. The rough terrain of the PMWHR is not ideal for helicopter use, which is more beneficial in large plains, he said. When asked about current management, Nunn said it is going well on the Pryor range but isn’t perfect. The AML, which has fluctuated over the years, is set at 90120 horses, which isn’t bad, he said. Nunn agrees with the concept of expanding the range into Custer National Forest areas that the horses have used in the past and present. He is for expansion not to accommodate more horses, but to give more space to the horses already living on the range, he said. Nunn said he thinks the wild horse program in the U.S. as a whole is “in shambles,” and said the bureau Courtesy photos Gene Nunn, front left, leads a wild horse down the trail out of Big Coulee trap. Two other BLM employees ride ahead of Nunn on the trail, leading wild horses of their own. The Lovell Chronicle 234 E. Main, Lovell, WY Contact us at: 548-2217 needs to come up with a better system for handling excess animals. Currently, thousands of once-wild horses are in long-term holding pens in places like Nebraska. The practice, which can keep horses in the facilities for their entire life of 40 years or more, is not good, Nunn said. When asked about memories of his time on the Pryor range, Nunn said he enjoyed the animals, but not the politics. He has many stories about having a good time while working in beautiful country doing what he loved the most with good friends. “There was real good camaraderie,” Nunn said. “There were so many little things that happened. It was enjoyable.” A missing link Recently, a link to Nunn and Taylor’s time as range technicians has surfaced. During remodeling of the Billings Field Office this winter, BLM employees found a shoebox containing detailed information about the horses on the range written by Taylor, according to PMWMC director Matt Dillon. The scientific notes are accompanied by photographs and include birth year, parents and a description of virtually every horse on the range from 1976 to 1990. Taylor’s notes represent a missing link to what the center had access to prior to receiving them, Dillon said, and fill in a time period before Rev. Schwieger’s family lineage notes, which extend from 1990 to ‘96. The BLM began their own records in 1996. Since he began borrowing Taylor’s notes from the BLM, Dillon said he has been spending more time digitizing than studying them. The notes fill a void of information and will help Dillon create a more historically complete kinship map – or mustang family tree. He said the center’s relationship with the BLM has become more and more cooperative and said the assembled data would be considered by the BLM for future management decisions. The BLM had estimated the ages of horses on the range, Dillon said, but now he is sure of each animal’s exact age. Taylor’s data confirmed that Beauty, born in 1987, is the oldest mare on the range, he said. Currently, Dillon and others are keeping tabs on the herd, naming each horse and recording data about changes in family structures. He spends much of his time traveling over the range, finding foals, confirming which horses are dead or alive, and which stallions are running with different mares. He said that things were definitely different in the early days of managing the range and credits Nunn, Taylor and others for their brave exploration and help in making horse management and the range what it is today. “It shows the work these guys did is still working for us,” Dillon said. Nunn took notes of his own, he said, though they weren’t as detailed as Taylor’s and were more “day-to-day writings.” Nunn and Dillon have plans to examine the notes together to see what additional information can be extracted from the 30-plus-year-old account. Dillon said he had heard about Taylor’s notes from people around town before they were discovered this winter. “Lynne always carried around little notebooks, you should find those,” he said people would tell him. And now that the data has become public record, it will help for years to come as people study the genetic make up of the herd. As new techniques are used in management such as genetic sampling, having a complete picture of the past will be invaluable for those making management decisions and wild horse enthusiasts alike. www.lovellchronicle.com [email protected] Historical 2 | The Lovell Chronicle | June 18, 2009 www.LovellChronicle.com Wambekes honored as 2009 Mustang Days Senior VIPs BY BRAD DEVEREAUX Deaver seniors who like good food and good company are likely to already know the 2009 Mustang Days Senior Center VIPs, who spend their time heading up the Deaver Lunch Bunch, a monthly luncheon held at the Deaver Community Center for seniors. Jim and Judy Wambeke and Jim’s mother, Marie, are being honored this year by the North Big Horn Senior Center. Judy, 67, said they took over the job from Loretta Schwehr about four years ago. They set up tables every week, clean up and call to remind patrons about the scheduled lunch. With a group of 40 or more seniors at each lunch, the job can be daunting. “I don’t give up on them,” she said, adding that many have to be called several times to confirm. The group seems to grow every week, she said, with strangers and regulars meeting and having a good time. “It’s about getting together,” Judy said. “Some don’t come to eat, they come to visit. Some come so they don’t have to cook.” The Deaver Diners enjoy food delivered from the senior center while chatting, usually with the men and the women divided on opposing sides of the room. “The men get awfully loud,” Marie, 91, laughed. Marie bakes a birthday cake from scratch each month for lunch bunch goers. She owned the Deaver Café from about 1955 to ’76 and still loves to bake. She was born in Nebraska and moved to Deaver when she was 1 year old, she said. Her son Jim, 70, was born and raised in Deaver. He began working on drilling rigs and eventually moved to Casper where he met his wife, Judy. The couple returned to Deaver in 2002. The Wambekes said many people volunteer to share the workload of the luncheons, which they appreciate. They mentioned Jess Wyatt, who has taken the responsibility of setting up tables and making coffee, the cooks and staff at the center, delivery drivers and center director Denise Andersen. Luncheons in Deaver occur on the first and third Tuesday of the month. In Frannie, the meals occur the second and fourth Tuesday. The Frannie Lunch Bunch was being organized by Barb Phillips in the past; now several volunteers have joined her and they take turns putting on the lunch. Center director Denise Andersen said she appreciates the Wambekes’ and others’ efforts to organize the Deaver-Frannie groups. “It’s a volunteer effort on the part of the seniors, which makes it even more special,” Andersen said. “If there’s a need, the seniors take action and generally it’s a success. It’s the absolute personification of what the Older Americans Act is about.” The Older Americans Act, which was passed by Congress in 1965, is where the center receives much of its funding, Andersen said, and encourages local participation. Anyone 60 and older in the DeaverFrannie area is encouraged to sign up to be a part of the lunch bunch in either town. Seniors can invite a guest of any age to accompany them. To sign up, contact the Senior Center at 548-6556. Meals are $2.50 for seniors and $4.75 for non-seniors. Be sure to wave to the Senior Center VIPs as they ride down Main Street in a convertible in this year’s Mustang Days Parade. Jim, Judy and Marie Wambeke Freudenthals are the 2009 parade marshals BY BRAD DEVEREAUX The 2009 Mustang Days Parade Marshals are Gov. Dave Freudenthal and his wife, Nancy. Elaine Harvey said she invited Gov. Freudenthal to participate while he was in town to present awards to three Big Horn County schools in May. After checking his schedule, Gov. Freudenthal took the invitation and the first couple of Wyoming will be seen riding down Main Street during the parade, Saturday, June 27. Harvey said she is excited to have the governor and first lady attend and appreciates that Gov. Freudenthal recognizes the Big Horn Basin and treats it like the rest of the state. Growing up in Thermopolis, Harvey said Gov. Freudenthal pays attention to the needs of the Big Horn Basin. From his spot on the State Loan and Investment Board, the governor has supported recent Big Horn County projects including construction at North Big Horn Hospital, the Lovell Fire Hall addition, Lovell’s water and sewer project and the hangar at the airport in Greybull. She said the governor provided funding resources in 2005 for document searches and the development of science to support management of Big Horn Lake to benefit interests in Big Horn County. When the Globe Canal was at risk to collapse and flood the streets of Lovell in August of 2007, the SLIB board set aside $300,000 in case of an emergency. The funds weren’t needed, but it was nice to know they were available, Harvey said. State officials joining the Freudenthals at the parade will be Secretary of State Max Maxfield and Superintendent of Public Instruction Jim McBride, Harvey said. Right, Gov. Freudenthal (center) poses with his Big Horn Basin accessories with Rep. Elaine Harvey of Lovell (left) and Sen. Ray Peterson of Cowley at an awards ceremony last month in Lovell. Freudenthal and his wife, Nancy, will be the 2009 Mustang Days Parade Marshals. For all your insurance needs! Murphey’s Debora Good, agent Dollar store Beat the heat and the traveling blues. All your last minute picnic and parade supplies. New Candles & Scents! Stop in to see us today! 80 e. Main st., lovell 548-6546 307-548-7891 8 E. Main Street Monday - Friday 9-5 Reminding you Don’t Drink and Drive! Have a fun & safe Mustang Days Celebration! Be in a brand new home in 8 weeks or less! G-P Gypsum reminds you to have a safe and wonderful Mustang Days Celebration. Georgia-Pacific Gypsum LLC Welcome to Lovell and Mustang Days! Lovell Drug has been in business for more than 100 Years! Stop in for the best malts & shakes in town! Manufactured by SummitCrest and Genesis Homes Wyoming Souvenirs Postcards Gifts • Cards • Cologne Precious Moments • Fine Jewelry Scrapbooking Supplies Willow Tree Buy now to get your $8,000 tax credit. We are here to help you! You can pick a floor plan, customize it for your needs and put it on a lot, all in 8 weeks! Come visit us and see how it’s done. Jaguar Home Sales 187 E. Main • Lovell • 548-9200 www.JaguarHomeSales.com 179 E. 3rd St., Lovell, WY 82431 • 548-2213 www.BankofLovell.com LOVELL DRUG June 18, 2009 | The Lovell Chronicle | Historical 3 www.LovellChronicle.com New Horizons Care Center honors four centenarians Four remarkable ladies were honored by the staff at the New Horizons Care Center recently. All four are centenarians – 100 years old or more. The four posed for a photograph and are, from left to right, Ethel Miller, Lucy Cox, Marie Scheeler and Madge Leibel. Ethel Miller was born March 9, 1909. She worked all of her life from her teenage years to retirement. When she and her husband, Sam, retired, they spent their winters in Lutz, Fla., sulky racing with their ponies. Upon arriving back in Maryland, they attended sulky races during the summer months, as well. Ethel had one son, John (Jack), who died Aug. 21, 2006. She has four grandchildren, nine great-grandchildren and nine greatgreat grandchildren. She loves chocolate – lots of it. Lucy Cox, as a teenager, leaving her family behind in Burlington, came to Lovell to graduate from high school. She married Reed Asay in 1927 and they had eight children. After Reed’s death in 1951, she married Burl Cox and they brought another daughter into the family. Lucy taught school, mostly fourth grade, for many years. Many of her students remember putting on a Lovell’s Day program and knowing that “they had the most important part.” Nothing pleased Lucy more than teaching, wheth- Ethel Miller, Lucy Cox, Marie Scheeler and Madge Leibel er at home, at school or in church, and seeing the light of understanding come into the eyes of those she taught. Marie Scheeler was born to John Balthasar and Elizabeth Fruekling Schneider on April 23, 1909, in Lincoln, Neb. Her parents were immigrants from Biedeck, Russia. Her father worked for the railroad and the family moved to Lincoln, where daughters Leda and Marie were born. In 1911, when Marie was 2, the family was transferred to Kane, east of Lovell. Marie’s parents wanted to farm and soon found ground in the Iona area across the Shoshone River. Brothers Harry and John were born, and the children attended school in Kane and at the German School in Lovell. Kane offered two years of high school, and after attending her freshman year at Kane, Marie finished school in Lovell. During that time, she met George Scheeler. He and his family were Germans from the Crimean area of Russia who had emigrated to Dickinson, N.D. and came to Cowley and then Lovell with the Great Western Sugar Co. Marie and George eloped to Red Lodge in 1927, lived in Lovell where son George Robert (Bob) was born and then began farming at Iona. Marie and George gradually built their farm into the largest working farm in the area, and Marie worked in the fields alongside her husband. Two more sons, Charles and Herbert, were born. Marie supplemented their farm income by driving the school bus and George worked sugar campaigns in Lovell and Billings. They eventually moved to Lovell and were semiretired, although both con- tinued to work at the sugar factory, Marie in the tare house. She also produced a huge garden. George died in 1988, and Marie kept up her garden and maintained her independence for several years and even was able to stay home for a few years after her eyesight and health began to fail, thanks to neighbors, Meals on Wheels and family. She entered the New Horizons Care Center in 2003 and celebrated her 100th birthday in April. Madge Leibel was born in 1909 in Lamar City, Ala. She had two sisters and two brothers, Minnie, Maggie, Judd and John. She moved to Lovell with her family at age 8 and graduated from Lovell High School. She is a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Madge married her first husband at the age of 26 and he died some years later. She married her second husband and had one son, Terry Leibel, who lives in Boise, Idaho. Her second husband died in 1970. Madge worked as a lunchroom lady for several years and was a wonderful homemaker. She enjoyed needlework, cooking and playing the piano. She collected drinking glasses and always had a beautiful garden. She played piano at her church and dedicated her life to her religion. She moved to the New Horizons Care Center in 1997 and still attends Relief Society and Sacrament. Wyoming Bentonite Part of the Lovell Area since 1971 Innovative Solutions for Industry through a Commitment to Quality the e n o y r e v e We wish ear’s y s i h t g n i r best du s y a D g n a t s Mu celebration l alt vhe Lgreo at place to ang your h Jim, Judy and MarieWambeke 307-548-6909 JohnsonHomeAndLand.com Your Full Time, Full Service Real Estate Professionals 235 E. Main, Lovell 2009 Senior Center V.I.P. North Big Horn Senior Center and Service District 757 Great Western • Lovell, WY • 548-6556 Proud to be serving North Big Horn County! Lisa Marchant, Sales Associate, Jyl Duffy, Lic. Admin. Assistant, Sarah Johnson, Broker/Owner A gre Lovell • Cowley • Byron • Deaver • Frannie Last year we served 14,317 meals in homes, and 18,731 meals in our dining room. Caring for those who cared so much for us! Thank you for your continued support! From bull riding to bike riding We bring you Mustang Days! The Chronicle employees are a diverse group of individuals with varying interests who all come together each week to bring you the local news. From Lakers caps to cowboy hats, we know that Lovell is a great place to hang our hats! David and Susan Peck, Brad Devereaux, Gladys McNeil, Pat Parmer, Erin Henson, Kymbre Moorehead, Jason Zeller, Dorothy Nelson, Teressa Ennis, Mike Kitchen, Peggy Fowler and the mailing crew. Your hometown newspaper File photo, July 2008 234 E. Main, Lovell, WY 307.548.2217 Historical 4 | The Lovell Chronicle | June 18, 2009 www.LovellChronicle.com Big Horn Canyon was a formidable place for explorers By David Peck The history of the American West is full of accounts of explorers and travelers – trekkers, if you will – who were looking for the easiest and quickest routes from point A to point B, very often not an easy task in the rugged mountain and canyon lands of the Rocky Mountains. From the earliest days, travelers looked for routes through the mountains offering relative ease of travel, routes able to be traversed on foot and, later, on horseback, routes with water and game. There was a network of trails throughout the northern Rockies, and one of the most prominent was the Bad Pass Trail, which ran along the western edge of the Big Horn Canyon and was used for thousands of years, first by Paleo-Indians, later by Plains Indian tribes and finally by mountain men looking to move beaver pelts from the wilds of what would later become Wyoming to St. Louis. Native people used the Bad Pass for more than 11,000 years, said Chris Finley, an archaeologist and historian at the Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area. The trail was part of a larger network of interconnecting trails in the region but was certainly one of the more prominent trails because it was well marked with rock cairns. Some of those ancient cairns can still be seen in the national recreation area to this day. “We’re finding cultural remains of groups identified as being over 11,000 years old,” Finley said. “The oldest intact or insitu (in place) evidence is from the early Archaic Period (5,000 to 8,000 years before present). “We’re finding a lot of stuff 11,000 years old. I’m assuming the area was utilized and that people were using that trail as a corridor and possibly for winter campsites. They were staying here for extended periods during the winter and we’ve found evidence of big game procurement strategies like animal traps, buffalo jumps and drive lines.” Early in the 18th century, fur trappers began using the Bad Pass Trail and many other trails and water routes as they developed the fur trade of the American West, but it is difficult to ascertain who used the trail and when because most of the mountain men didn’t keep journals and many of them couldn’t write. According to information available at the Bighorn Canyon NRA Cal S. Taggart Visitor Center near Lovell, the first documented description of the mouth of Big Horn Canyon was written on Aug. 31, 1805, by Francois Antoine Larocque, who was working for the Northwest Company at the time. In his journal, Larocque wrote: “The river is broad, deep and clear water, strong courrant (sic), bed stone and gravel.” About a half mile above his camp, Larocque wrote that the Big Horn River passed between two huge rocks and lost “2/3 of its breadth but gains proportionally in depth. Larocque climbed the east wall of the canyon and wrote later that, “it is aweful (sic) to behold and makes one giddy to look down upon the river. From his vantage point, he wrote, the river appeared to be “quite narrow” and flowed with “great rapidity immediately under our feet, so that I did not dare to look down (until) I could find a stone behind which I could keep and, looking over it, see the foaming water without danger of falling in.” Larocque apparently did not venture into the canyon because of the sheer rock walls. Also, perhaps relevant to legends that have persisted to modern times, the Crow Indians told Larocque, according to National Park Service historian Edwin C. Bearss’ history of Big Horn Canyon, that about 30 to 40 miles upstream in Big Horn Canyon there could be found a waterfall where a Manitou (spirit) lived. This Manitou took the form of a werewolf, Larocque reported, “dwelling in the falls and raising out of it to devour any man or beast that approached,” Bearss wrote. “As the werewolf was invulnerable to bullets, it could not be slain.” Then in 1807, two members of the Lewis and Clark Expedition – the Corps of Discovery – joined up with the Manuel Lisa expedition to establish trade with the tribes along the Yellowstone River. Departing from Fort Raymond, also called Manuel’s Fort, at the mouth of the Big Horn River, John Colter and George Drouillard were sent by Lisa in the fall of 1807 to make contact with tribes in the region. Colter made his well-known journey through the Big Horn Basin and into the Teton and Yellowstone country in 1807-08, while Drouillard also explored the Big Horn Basin during that time, making two trips into the Basin. On Drouillard’s first trip in 1807, according to the history written by Bearss, Drouillard visited a Crow village at the confluence of the Shoshone River and the Big Horn and another village opposite the mouth of Sage Creek just north of Lovell. Drouillard estimated the population of the two villages at 280 lodges, or around 2,240 individuals – about the population of present day Lovell. Some documented accounts of the Lisa expedition note Photo courtesy of the National Park Service The decaying remains of Dr. G.W. Barry’s motor launches that carried guests from the Cedarvale Guest Ranch up and down the Big Horn River rested on the bank of the Big Horn River until being salvaged by some Greybull residents. One boat, the Hillmont, now rests at the Barry’s Landing boat ramp. that Drouillard may have used the Bad Pass. But Finley believes that Colter, also, may well have used the Bad Pass Trail – the most direct and well-established trail into the Big Horn Basin – rather than going through Pryor Gap, as many accounts have stated. Many other mountain men used the Bad Pass Trail over the years, among them Jim Bridger, Jedediah Smith, Andrew Henry, Thomas Fitzpatrick and Bill Sublette, according to the Park Service. Into the canyon Today, power boats zoom up and down the Big Horn Lake pulling water skiers and seeing sights in Big Horn Canyon and many side canyons that few people had seen as recently as 50 years ago. Indeed, the Big Horn Canyon was truly one of the last frontiers of the lower 48 states, rarely penetrated until well into the 20th century. Finley has become interested in the first trips through the Big Horn Canyon itself, not just the many journeys on the Bad Pass Trail above, and he and the Park Service staff have provided many articles about the various expeditions. Although some written histories of the canyon state that some tribes feared and avoided the canyon, believing it to be possessed by evil spirits such as the Manitou told to Larocque, Finley said the Native Americans certainly ventured down into the canyon, and he said there is evidence of habitation in the canyon. The first mountain man documented to have actually run the length of Big Horn Canyon, Finley said, was Jim Bridger, who in 1825 was with William Ashley’s party as they moved beaver pelts to St. Louis. After the 1825 Rendezvous on Henry’s Fork of the Green River in what would become southwest Wyoming, more than 2,000 pelts had to be transported to St. Louis. William Ashley transported the pelts to the Yellowstone River and the Missouri via the Bad Pass Trail, but Bridger, a member of the Ashley party, decided to navigate Big Horn Canyon on the water. According to the book “Jim Bridger” by J. Cecil Alter, Bridger built a raft of driftwood and “ventured a pilot voyage” through Big Horn Canyon in late July or early August. “He succeeded, unwittingly performing a feat never equaled in western travel annals except by General Ashley’s descent of the Green,” Alter wrote. An account by Capt. W.F. Raynolds in 1859 described what Bridger saw during his trip of 34 years earlier, according to Alter: “His descriptions of the grandeur of the scenery along its banks are glowing and remarkable. He portrays a series of rugged canyons, the river foaming among jagged rocks, between lofty overhanging precipices, whose threatening arches shut out all sunlight; interspersed with narrow valleys, teeming with luxuriant verdure, through whose pleasant banks the stream flows as placidly as in its broad valley below.” Photo courtesy of the National Park Service Twenty-seven local men made one final trip down the Big Horn Canyon in 1965 before the water was backed up by Yellowtail Dam to form Big Horn Lake. Pictured at Black Canyon at the end of the trip are (front with sign) David Thompson and Jim O’Shae with the National Park Service, (front row, l-r) Grant Salisbury, Dick Hovland, Wes Meeker, Wayne Darnall, Ward G. Myers, Ross G. Stapp, Graig Whitney, Stuart Connor, Vern Waples, (second row) Cal Taggart, Bud Webster, Bill Evans, Elmer Gahley, Otto Weaver, W.E. Sutton, John Petenther, Charles Borberg, Max Stone, Willard Fraser, (third row) Fletch Newby, Ted Baker, Edison Real Bird, Wallace Iron, Bob Borberg and Clifford Thompson. Bridger warned others in the Ashley party to not attempt the canyon voyage he had just accomplished, such was the harrowing nature of the journey. Although the Bad Pass Trail continued to be used by fur traders over the next 15 years, a decline in the fur industry led to a steep decline in traffic on the Bad Pass, which faded in importance. Accordingly, no other brave souls are known to have attempted to float the Big Horn through the canyon until more than 65 years later. The Gillette Expedition It may seem hard to believe, since Big Horn Canyon had been known for decades to be practically impassable, but in the late 19th century the canyon was considered for a railroad route by the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, and a party of surveyors was sent into the canyon in March of 1891 to ascertain the feasibility of such a venture. A man associated with that surveying crew, Edward Gillette, took the opportunity of the surveying expedition to conduct his own exploration of the canyon, traveling the length of the canyon north from the Crooked Creek area on foot since much of the river was frozen during that part of the winter. Gillette well knew the reputation of the rugged canyon. In his own detailed written account of the trip, Gillette wrote (always spelling “canyon” as “canon”): “This canon was probably the last one in the United States to be explored throughout its entire length, the main reason for this being that the walls at the head and foot of the canon were practically impassable, and that the walls on either side of the river formed a true box canon for the greater part of its distance.” As he made his way through the Crow Indian Reservation, Gillette obtained from the Crows as much information as he could about the canyon, and the report was as follows, he later wrote: “That it was a box canon with numerous falls and rapids; that no one had ever been through it; and that the few who had ventured to make the trip had perished in the attempt.” Gillette camped on Crooked Creek and met legendary character Frank Sykes, who had recently moved to the area. He also met N.S. Sharpe, a prospector he had known in the Black Hills. Both offered to make the trip with Gillette, but he chose Sharpe, since he knew him, but he asked Sykes to “look us up if we did not return in about 10 days.” The men fashioned a sled of cottonwood poles bearing blankets for bedding, provisions for six or seven days, rifles and surveying instruments. Although it was still the late winter, Gillette and Sharpe found open water from time to time, and Gillette worried about suddenly warmer weather causing snow to melt and flood the canyon. “As we journeyed down the canon, keeping a sharp lookout for air holes in the ice and glancing at the vertical walls of limestone on either side, we began to realize that we were in the box canyon of the Big Horn River, the terrors of which had been so often repeated us to the measure that ‘no one had ever gone through the canon alive.’ “The talus being washed away at the entrance, as well as at the mouth of the canon, ‘no admittance’ stares the pedestrian in the face, no matter from which end he may approach the gorge; and should he succeed in passing these gateways it would only be to come to grief at some vertical wall extending to the bottom of the river, while the stream is making good time down a rapid. This probably is the reason that the canon has not been explored up to this time.” Having passed under some overhanging cliffs, Gillette wrote: “We seemed to be in an immense shed with the roof extending over us and hundreds of feet above.” At the state line, Gillette and Sharpe came upon the survey party “engaged in running a preliminary line in the canon, to determine its practicability for a railroad.” As the men struggled to perform their survey work, Gillette noted their predicament, noting, “The men were apparently but a short distance above the river; however, when we had climbed up to them and looked down, we realized that a tumble might result disastrously. “The transit was set up on the side of the cliff, with one leg of the tripod nearly parallel to the plumb line, while the transit man was barely able to maintain his position on the narrow shelving rocks; a misstep of an inch would have precipitated him to the hard boulders, seventy feet below. The chainmen made their way around almost vertical cliffs, hanging on with fingers and toes, and as we gazed at them we thought, there is no room here for the fellow who usually ‘coons’ a dangerous place.” The canyon walls were about 600 feet high at that point, rising to 1,000 feet at the mouth of Devil’s Canyon, Gillette wrote. Devil’s Canyon, he wrote, “carries quite a stream of water from the gold camp at Bald Mountain, and this stream, as if competing with the main canon, has formed a grand canon of its own.” Gillette wrote about the Sentinel, a tall pillar of lime- www.LovellChronicle.com June 18, 2009 | The Lovell Chronicle | Historical 5 bold enough to brave the watery depths stone, as well as many side streams “forming formidable canons of their own,” “innumerable” waterfalls 500 feet or more in height, a food ford and game trail out of the canyon at what would later be called Barry’s Landing, gold “in paying quantities” at the mouths of streams from both the east and west, a point of rocks he named the Towers, “knife edge” side canyons, portages around rapids, Dry Head Canyon, Bull Elk Creek, towers and pinnacles “on a grander scale than Yellowstone Canon forming a castellated structure of surpassing grandeur and beauty,” a band of bighorn sheep and Black Canyon, just below which Gillette and Sharpe found the steepest rapids of the river. “Where Black Canon empties its stream into the river a whirlpool was formed and large cakes of ice were being drawn into the vortex and disappeared from view,” Gillette wrote. After finally making their way out of the canyon on the north end, Gillette and Sharpe returned to the south by way of the Bad Pass and met Sykes along the way. He had been looking for them on horseback. Gillette was thrilled by his expedition and rendered as grand a description of Big Horn Canyon as any tourist publication could offer up: “The Grand Canon of the Colorado is an immense chasm, so broad as to remind one of a wide valley. The Royal Gorge of the Arkansas River is magnificent for a short distance only, and the stream is small, while the Yellowstone Canon is awe-inspiring and gorgeously colored for a comparatively brief space. “Big Horn Canon, however, combines all these features with that of a true box canon and such features as the overhanging cliffs are not to be found elsewhere, to my knowledge. As a canon it is the most satisfactory of any I have visited in this country or Alaska.” The Sheridan Four Once the word got out that there were no waterfalls on the Big Horn River itself in the canyon, other parties made their way through the canyon by boat. Writing his article a few years later, Gillette noted T.E. Calvert and M.W. Ensign of “the Burlington (railroad)” and a little later W.G. Griffen, James P. and Thomas Robinson and J.W. Newell of Sheridan in 1893, followed by Garret and Alexander Forbes of Boston in 1903. That Sheridan expedition of Griffen, Newell and the Robinsons was made in August of 1893 and was described in intricate detail in a series of four articles written by J.W. Newell, in collaboration with W.G. (Wellen George) Griffen, and printed in the Sheridan Post on Dec. 17, 24 and 31, 1922, and Jan. 7, 1923. That series of four articles, as well as other writings about the trip by Newell, can be found on Ancestry.com at http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~wyoming/ar-bhcanyon1.htm. The series starts with the headline “Sheridan men win gamble with death in canyon trip” along with the sub-head “Four pioneers in small boat accomplish feat equaled but once since in a 30-year period; W.G. Griffen, James P. and Thomas Robinson and J.W. Newell braved hazards of man-trap, where many had died in vain effort; story of adventure reads like fiction; trip filled with thrilling experiences and narrow escapes.” At the time of the trip, tales of unsuccessful attempts at traveling through the canyon were legendary, according to Newell, who wrote sensationally: “There had been many stories told and printed to the effect that such a feat was impossible, that several parties of adventurers had started down the river with the avowed purpose of going through or perishing in the attempt, and that not one of them had ever been heard of; that others had been wrecked and stranded on an island where they had remained many weeks, subsisting on such game and fish as they could shoot and catch. “Still othPhoto courtesy of Kent Steinke ers, according Making the daring journey down to the stories the Big Horn Canyon in 1893 we heard, had were four brave gentlemen from become discourSheridan: (not necessarily in aged by inorder) James P. Robinson, Thomas surmountable Robinson, Wellen George Griffen obstacles which and J.W. Newell. they had encountered, and returned on foot along the banks and over the tops of the mountains which extended to the water’s edge and terminate in perpendicular stone walls. “There were even accounts of great falls in the walled portions of the canyon which it was impossible for even a wild animal to pass; of giant whirlpools where every floating object was sucked down, never again coming to the surface. The theory was advanced that there was a sub-aqueous outlet through which everything that came downstream was drawn into the bowels of the earth and deposited in some vast subterranean cavity, the water finding its way out and eventually back into the river through seepage and springs. It was with all these reports in mind, and a determination to ascertain their truth or falsity, that the Sheridan men outfitted and started on what they supposed was a perilous undertaking.” Using similar, spectacular language, Newell chronicled the trip in four parts. Part I included an account of a bull elk stomping a mountain lion to death in defense of a cow elk before the boat even hit the water, and Part II described the party’s investigation of a sulfur cave just before they reached the canyon. In Part III, Newell described how the foursome shot the rapids prior to reaching Devil’s Canyon, paralyzed by fear to inaction at first before “a realization of imminent danger brought about a violent reaction.” “Every man arose to his feet and prepared to make the best fight he could for his life,” Newell wrote. “Then the bow of the boat tipped downward, we could see ahead, and appeared to be entering a dark tunnel at the end of a turbulent rapid. The boat bobbed, jumped, bucked and ‘sunfished’ like an unbroken cow pony. Seizing the long poles, each one exerted his whole strength in guiding the boat and avoiding the many boulders and jagged rocks whose ugly heads appeared above the surface. By almost superhuman efforts we succeeded in avoiding the most dangerous places in the rapid, and the boat soon shot over the last shoal into smooth water. “The suspense was over, but perspiration streamed down every man’s face. Figuratively speaking, we had ‘sweat blood’ during the past few moments.” In Part IV, Newell describes a violent storm howling and screaming through the canyon, and he recalled how Alexander Forbes of Boston, writing after his trip down the canyon in July of 1903, described a strange noise in the canyon. “As I was walking down one of the sandy beaches on the river’s edge, Photo courtesy of the National Park Service I heard a howl, beginning Intrepid adventurers load the boats in preparation for the 1949 expedition at a high pitch and sweepdown Big Horn Canyon that included a color film of the trip. Members of the ing down into a bass clef. expedition were William Roberts and Don Weaver of Frannie and Ward King I stopped short and looked Jr., Thornton Cougill and Bill Greene of Greybull. around; I could hear nothing but the roar of the river. I took a step backwards Meeteetse and Alton Wickwire, who had apparently sucand the howl reversed itself, starting low and rising to cessfully “dared” the canyon in 1912. a high pitch. I then moved back and forth over the same An article in the April 1985 edition of the Western ground and found the noise to be no more than the roar of Boatman describes the trip in detail, again making note the river, rising and falling like a siren. It seems the rocks of those who had died attempting to float the canyon and around me formed a sort of sounding board, treating the the belief that Native American tribes avoided the area sound as a prism treats sunlight, placing the tones ac“because they believed evil spirits inhabited the place.” cording to their pitch, the high in one place and the low in “Eerie noises sometimes issued from the place,” the another.” article stated. By the turn of the century, plans were already under The article mentions Bridger’s trip in 1825 and Gilway to dam the Big Horn River, changing Big Horn Canlette’s walk in 1891. The article also states that Colter yon forever, but not before other used the Bad Pass during his trip of 1907-08, backing up intrepid souls made the trip down Finley’s belief. the river. “Here was a place of mystery, unknown and largely The Sept. 30, 1916 edition unexplored – the land, they said, that time forgot,” the arof the Railway Review tells of ticle stated, adding that Belden, a well-known photograa project to build a dam at the pher, was eager to capture the canyon on film. north end of Big Horn Canyon The four men launched The Spirit of the Pitchfork on to produce hydroelectric power. Aug. 8 at Basin, stopped at Kane on the second day and The article describes the various then continued into the canyon. The article goes on to defacets of the idea, engineering for scribe the 10-day trip. the project and the beauty of the Judge Metz would scout ahead of the larger boat in canyon. a rubber boat he called The Helldiver, shoot the rapids, In discussing the difficulty make his way to the shore and signal directions to the of surveying the canyon, a projnavigators on the Spirit. ect that had been under way for “There were close calls, but the keelboat was a stouttwo years at that time, the article hearted craft and met each battle with aplomb,” the arnotes the inaccessible nature ticle stated. of the canyon, explaining: “Not The party was greeted by Native Americans when many years ago it was regarded they camped at Black Canyon, and the Indians were apas next to impossible for one to parently alarmed when told the men planned to shoot the pass through this canyon alive. most dangerous rapids of the river below Black Canyon. No one had been known to accomThey declared that “no one had ever done that and lived” Wellen George plish the feat, and several had and even tried to hang onto the Spirit to keep it from enGriffen been drowned in the attempt. tering the stream. “At a number of points the With Helldiver going first, followed by the Spirit, both water in swift, rocky rapids is so boats survived the plunge down the rapids, where they rough that only the greatest skill were greeted by “cheers and a great clamor from the Inor luck in steering can save a boat from being filled with dians,” the article stated, adding, “Those white men had water or smashed on the rocks. In some instances where dared the evil spirits of the canyon and the perils of the logs were observed to pass through certain of these rapids wild river and had won.” they were carried along in a tumbling motion, end over Filmed in color end.” Another well-publicized trip down the canyon took The canyon’s reputation was fully intact in 1916. place in August of 1949, when five men departed from The railroad article states that the first person to traGreybull in two boats on an expedition to run the rapids verse the canyon was said to be a soldier from Fort C.F. and film the trip with a color motion picture camera. Smith in 1868 or before who, to escape pursuing Indians, On the trip were Don Weaver and William Roberts of made the passage on a log. The first to pass through the Frannie and Ward King Jr., Thornton Cougill and phocanyon by boat, the article stated, were T.E. Calvert and tographer Bill Greene, all of Greybull. Cougill and Greene William M. Ensign of the Burlington and Missouri River had previous experience on the river and had successfully Railroad, who went down the canyon in a small boat in navigated the canyon in 1938, when they reportedly saw July of 1891, making portage around some of the worst a three-foot lizard in the canyon. rapids, on an exploration trip to determine the practicabilPre-trip publicity once again proclaimed the treachity of extending the railroad through the canyon, much as erous nature of the “practically inaccessible” canyon that Edward Gillette had done five months earlier, as noted in was known as “Wyoming’s Lost Country.” “But for all its beauty, it has remained a land of mysthe article. tery to all but a handful of explorers who have dared to The 1916 article goes on to describe the possible fupenetrate its depths,” proclaimed the Northern Wyoming ture dam, reservoir, power plant, a possible electrified railroad in the region, a plant to extract nitrogen from the Daily News. In post-trip reports, Greene wrote about the “exatmosphere, irrigation potential and a railroad line from the dam north to Hardin and on to a point near Custer on tremely arduous” trip and how the boats were hung up in huge rocks that line the river bottom. the Northern Pacific Railroad. “At Suicide Rapids,” Greene wrote, “the larger boat Dr. Barry’s boats was forced into the canyon wall, causing severe damage, Around the turn of the century, Dr. G.W. Barry came and one motor was damaged beyond repair. In the Bull to the Dry Head Country to try his hand at gold prosElk rapids, both boats broke oars and tragedy was narpecting, homesteading near Trail Creek adjacent to the rowly averted. One oarsman suffered an arm injury and canyon at what would become known as Barry’s Landfirst aid was required.” ing. He eventually established a dredging operation, and The expedition photographed Chain Canyon, with although he did recover gold from the operation, it wasn’t enough to keep it running and Barry eventually turned to links of the chain still hanging, and at one point, while exploring a side canyon, the men found the remains of a dude ranching. Barry established the Cedarvale Dude Ranch at Hills- badly disintegrated human skeleton, along with the skeleton of a grizzly, “where they had died in their last mortal boro, Mont., and in an effort to promote the new venture, combat,” according to the Hardin Herald. At the scene, which included boat rides on the Big Horn River, Barthey found a flintlock rifle, dated 1825, according to the ry, Claude St. John and Delbert Smith took a trip down Herald article. Big Horn Canyon on the 18-foot powerboat The Edith, A detailed account of the trip was written by Margalaunching from Horseshoe Bend on May 28, 1913. ret Simpson of Greybull and printed in February of 1950. According to Bearss’ history of the Bighorn Canyon The famous color film was shown in Hardin in DeNRA, citing an article from the Red Lodge Picket newscember of 1949, in Worland at the Wyoming Press Associpaper on March 10, 1916, the Edith made it through the ation annual meeting in February of 1950, at the Deaver canyon, the article noting that the boat survived Bull Elk High School Gym on Jan. 28, 1950, at the Big Horn TheRapids even though the boat “reeled in her path like a atre in Greybull on Feb. 7, 1950, and at the Wigwam Thedrunken sailor” and made it past Allen’s Rock, named for atre in Basin two days later on Feb. 9. Dr. Will Allen, who led an expedition through the canyon Posters about the film entitled “Montana and Wyoaround the turn of the century that saw the party’s boat ming’s Lost Country” filmed “by men you know” urged shattered, requiring them to finish the journey on foot. people to attend and see “The Big Horn Canyon in all it’s The Picket article also noted that the Edith successfully passed by the Homburg Whirlpool near the mouth of glory and view “death-defying rapids, overhanging walls, tragedies of the past, snakes, flowers, wild fruit of every Black Canyon, named for two German boys who had lost description, the canyon of faces, fossils of another age and their lives trying to pass by the dangerous stretch. The breathtaking thrills and spills,” among various descripEdith eventually made it all the way to New Orleans six tions. weeks later, and over the years Barry took many guests In 1966, Yellowtail Dam was completed, and with up and down the river in his motor launches. the formation of Big Horn Lake, the once mysterious and Writing in 1916, according to Bearss, Barry stated, formidable depths of Big Horn Canyon were opened to all “The opinion of all who have made these canyon trips is who could run a boat. Now visitors can explore the canthat it is as fine a trip as one can take anywhere; that asyon and view the wonders previously only seen by hardy cending the river is sublime and coming down positively explorers brave enough to take a boat down the treacherthrilling.” ous rapids. Other treks From the first people to walk the Bad Pass Trail to One well-known expedition down the canyon took mountain man Jim Bridger to the modern boat driver or place in August of 1928 in a wooden keelboat featuring hiker, Big Horn Canyon has been and shall always be a Judge Percy W. Metz of Basin, photographer Charles special place to explore. Belden and Carl Dunrud of the Pitchfork Ranch near Historical 6 | The Lovell Chronicle | June 18, 2009 www.LovellChronicle.com Mary Had a Little Lamb Remembering sheep ranching in the Big Horn Basin BY JOYCE K. GOODRICH Mary had a little lamb. And so did Patty, Gary, Peter and most other kids who grew up in the Lovell area during 1920 –1955. Its fleece was white as snow. Not exactly true. Our lamb’s fleece fit the description of old snow mixed with a bit of grime. My father termed it “snirt” (snow mixed with dirt). Lambs may look soft and fluffy in photographs but in reality their fleece feels a bit greasy from all the lanolin and it is tightly curled. But young lambs were fun to cuddle and pet as you fed them from discarded glass bottles with black rubber nipples. As the lambs grew, their diet changed, and I remember carrying buckets of warm mash to feed my twin lambs. It was heavy work for a young child but it did teach responsibility. 4-H members and FFA boys took special care in grooming and caring for their animals that they hoped would win the blue ribbon at the county fair. Other children raised “bum” lambs as a money raiser but most of us simply thought of them as a family pet. Everywhere that Mary went the lamb was sure to go: Eldona Goodrich (18991988) wrote in her memoirs, “and I mean pet, for where we went, these lambs went also. A common sport was to challenge a friend to a lamb race; about as exciting to us as horse racing to derby fans. We even used Main Street for our race track, and if passers-by objected they never bothered to tell us so.” Maybe that was the beginning of kids sheep races that are held in small town rodeos today. One local history records that as early as 1887 agriculture and sheep began sharing the land in Wyoming. The cattlemen in the Big Horn Basin didn’t take kindly to those “smelly critters that gnawed the grass too close to the ground.” The cowboys vowed that the sheep destroyed free roaming cattle feed, and thus the sheep and cattle “war” began. The battle finally came to a head in 1909 in Ten Sleep. During my day, however, sheep raising and sheep shearing were a big source of income for families living here. Some of the prominent sheep men of that era were Jesse W. Crosby of Cowley and the Snyder brothers. The Snyders had sheep pens near the Shoshone River close to where the old glass factory stood. But perhaps the biggest sheep rancher around was Claude Lewis. He employed many local men as sheepherders during the summer months, and as help when lambing time came around. He also hired shearers. SHEEP SHEARING The thick growth of wool that helped the sheep survive the subzero winters in Wyoming needed to come off in the early spring and be shipped to market. It was a good cash crop. So hardy men with strong backs and a poor sense of smell became sheep shearers. At first the sheep were sheared with hand clippers. Rueben Allphin, my grandfather, sheared sheep in his younger years. He told a funny experience he had as an LDS missionary in Buck County, Pa. He came across a group of three men who were shearing a sheep. Two of them held the legs as the other man cut the wool. Grandpa scratched his head in amusement and said, “Let me show you how we do that in Wyoming.” The crowd guffawed as the young missionary took off his suit coat and approached the sheep. But the laughter ceased when Rueben held the sheep’s legs with one hand and used the clippers with the other. He finished the job in record time. When he left he looked back to see the eastern farmers return to their three-man method. Guess you can’t teach old sheepherders new tricks-at least not back east in 1910. Porter Goodrich, who is former Lovell High School Principal Grant Goodrich’s father, had a sheep shearing crew that traveled from Utah, crossed Wyoming and ended up in Ringling, Mont., near the Canadian border. These crews employed young men to tag the fleece. Tags were mainly balls of manure and wool that weren’t supposed to go with the fleece to market. That bit of information was not mentioned in Mary’s nursery rhyme. The taggers were also used to “tromp” the fleece. Vernal Goodrich (class of 1945) recalls that “both were nasty, dirty jobs but ‘tying’ fleeces, on the other hand, was quite lucrative since I was paid by the fleece rather than by the day and I soon realized that I could make more money tying than tromping. The going rate was one-half cent per fleece and I could make five bucks on a good day. My record was 3,201.” It was a big improvement when hand clippers were replaced with power shears. Later, the portable power plant was invented and it powered the plant for sheepshearers in remote areas where there was no electricity. Hernias were a common ailment for even the hardiest sheep shearer. But back to the owners of the sheep: There were others in our community Welcome to ! Mustang Days who ran their flocks in “them thar hills.” Vic Showalter, Tom Adams and even Hyrum Bischoff, who is famous for his large land holdings, ran sheep as well as cattle at one time. Vern Asay had a big herd on his YU Ranch near Meeteetse and his father, Al Asay, before him grazed his flocks on 1,000 acres near the Nowood River in Ten Sleep. M.D. Harris was known to employ young men new to the area. One of these young men was my great grandfather, Levi Sawyer. Levi later acquired his own flocks, and at one time owned the famous M.L. Ranch. He ran his sheep in the mountains above Ten Sleep. His little wife, Rhoana, cooked in a sheep wagon for 24 men during shearing season. TICK SHOTS I remember classmates such as Elaine Bishoff and others who spent the majority of their summer in the foothills and mountain ranges of the Big Horns complaining about getting their yearly tick shot. The shots must have been unpleasant, but they gave the recipient protection from ticks whose bite could lead to Rocky Mountain Fever, a deadly disease in the days before penicillin. In the history, “Legacy of Love,” written by Noma Asay Harris and Betty Asay Stine, I gleaned further information about the sheep raising process. LAMBING Lambing camps were set up in the spring when new lambs were born. Before the birth sheepherders tagged the sheep. The herder cut the wool around the ewe’s bag, under the tail and between the rear legs. It was not a pleasant job but helped when the ewes gave birth. Some lambing camps had small pens or sheds to shelter the sheep, but in Wyoming there was a lot of pasture lambing. In other words, the lambs were born out in the hills. During this period the sheep were tended around the clock and some young ewes were tied during birth to keep them from running. If a lamb died during birth it was not uncommon for the herder to quickly skin the dead lamb and place his hide around a bum (a newborn who had lost his mother in the birthing process) to entice the new mother to accept the baby as her own. Other orphan lambs were adopted as family pets and raised by herders and their families. When the lambs were small their tails were docked, or cut short. Often a small ring or washer was placed on the tail and as the lambs grew the ring cut off the circulation and the tails fell off. SHEEP WAGONS James Candlish, a blacksmith from Rawlins, COURTESY PHOTO A typical sheep herd of the Big Horn Basin. Left, Reuben Allphin demonstrates his quick way of shearing sheep with hand-held clippers. is often credited with the invention of the sheep wagon in 1884. Later, the Schulte Hardware Company of Casper modified Candlish’s “home on wheels,” and sheep wagons became standardized around 1900. Some sheep ranchers owned as many as 20 wagons. According to Nancy Weidel, a Wyoming historian, “In 1910 Wyoming boasted 5-1/2 million sheep; one sheep wagon and herder cared for as many as 3,000 sheep. Old-timers tell of seeing a sheep wagon on every hilltop on the winter range.” Today, these worn-out wagons that have outlived their usefulness are often seen in pastures and ranches throughout the area, but they, too, seem to be disappearing. My husband, Gary, wanted to purchase an old sheep wagon and restore it. He thought our grandchildren would enjoy sleeping in it when they came to visit. Unfortunately, everyone he approached about buying an old wagon refused. Later he returned to the same area where he had found them in abundance, only to find that the sheep wagons had disappeared. He asked Loretta Bischoff what happened to her wagons and she replied, “They were stolen.” “You mean I could steal one but I can’t buy one?” Gary responded. “I guess that’s right,” Loretta answered. SHEEP DIPPING After the sheep were sheared they were herded into a big trough. The sheep had to swim the length of a trough that was filled with a mixture of liquid creosote. This killed any parasites and sealed nicks and cuts from the shearing process. Fences were also soaked in creosote to prevent rotting. After dipping, the sheep were taken to the summer range. Children today know little about this era in Wyoming history. They wear their warm parkas made from manmade fibers and sleep under electric blankets. They can’t imagine how children of my era yearned for a warm wool coat and a fine wool blanket for their beds. If these stores are not passed on they will soon be forgotten by the upcoming generations. For instance, when I told my honor student grandson about the fun I had playing in the irrigation ditches that outlined the streets of Lovell when I was a child, he asked, “Grandma, what’s a ditch?” Who knows, the time may come when a greatgrandchild might ask, “Grandma, what’s a sheep?” Joyce will hold book signings for her newest book, “Up, Up The Mountain,” during Mustang Days at the Family Fun Night and the All School Reunion. She will also sign books at the Red Apple Thursday morning at 10 a.m. “Up, Up the Mountain” will also be available at Lovell Drug and other local stores. It can be ordered online by e-mailing [email protected] or at www.tellmystorytoo. com. Ask your outlets to open up and say AAHHHH. Minchow’s Service & Food Court Have a fun & safe Mustang Days! “G GIVE YOUR HOME AN ENERGY EFFICIENCY Be sure to enjoy the Cowley Boys in our parking lot Friday night from 8:30-11:30 pm C CHECK UP.” We have programs, tips and ideas to help h you identify the best ways to save energy, plus cash incentives to help make the savings happen. c Your home will be in top energy shape in no time. Y Fun for the whole family! Burgers & Fries! Open late during Mustang Days! 317 E. Main • Lovell Station: 548-7211 Food Court: 548-7979 Convenience Store • Cooper Tires • Propane Interstate Batteries • Complete Service Work Gas • 24-hr. credit card fueling • Diesel Bulk Deliveries • Computer Spin Balancing © 2009 Rocky Mountain Power JIM MINCHOW, OWNER You’ll find all sorts of energy-saving answers at Y rockymountainpower.net. r June 18, 2009 | The Lovell Chronicle | Historical 7 www.LovellChronicle.com An application of theoretical nonsense BY E. DENNEY NEVILLE Theoretical nonsense is relevant and worth the exercise when it serves a purpose of higher interest. For example: If a ball dropped six feet rebounds one half that distance each time it bounces, in theory it should never stop bouncing. With some creative determination we can adapt this same theory to the standard, relevant misadventure of fishing. Say we get to fish one Saturday every other year (follow me closely). If we divide by half the time between the two Saturdays, like the rebound distance of the bouncing ball, we can shorten the time until we would be fishing pretty much all the time. Time would become a series of wonderful Saturdays dedicated to fishing. This demonstrates that applied theoretical nonsense might be made relevant to legal, in-house domestic authorities and we could create an unavoidable piscatory continuum (fishing-continuous) locked in with no end. The in-house authority would have to accept it. There is one thing wrong with the theory however; its antithesis is reality, in this case, applied gravity. Gravity will eventually override the up-down motion of the ball until it comes to rest. Not a problem, if the ball stops on Saturday. The probability is increased if you factor into the equation a more than nominal bribe. This kind of nonsense will eventually override the patience of the in-house authority and she will accept the bribe to help solidify the conclusion we have come to. Even though this is a brilliant finding, explaining it to the wife will be difficult because of its highly selfserving and technical nature. Measures of elaborate cunning and deception garnished with hefty bribes will have to be continued. To further enhance the probability of success, buy her a nice, new pickup, and she will believe you when you tell her this discovery is highly classified material entrusted to you by local shaman, Ernie Fritz Smith. Tell her he revealed it to you for only ten bucks, after staring for nine hours into a dark ice hole last winter, which enabled you to attain a transcendent state of monk-like meditation and rapture, due to advanced, euphoric hypothermia—concluding with the hauling in of a nine pound bass from the icy waters of Voodoo Reservoir. Explain to her this kind of discovery is of deep, mystical significance, an atypical phenomenon based on empirical law, and you can’t, even under threat of legal injunction, ignore an empirical law that requires $50-an-hour language to describe the significance thereof. Now, the dark, down side—diligent maintenance is required if you want it to work at your convenience for an extended period of time. Continued bribes and complicated concessions will be necessary. However, be forewarned that if it fails, your fishing gear will come up missing and be replaced with yard tools. And if your wife comes up missing, it will cost you even more than replacing just your fishing gear. Caution is advised, especially if any kind of fishy nonsense begins to make fishy sense—yard tools make for cumbersome fishing gear and a missing wife may not miss the fishing, either; and you will never get to drive her new pickup. Welcome to ! s y a D g n a t s Mu We will be closed during the parade, and will close for the day at 2 p.m. Saturday to enjoy the festivities. CK Hardware Whether you’ve been away for decades or just a few years, maybe now is the right time for you to be considering Lovell for your business, your family, your life. Call us at 307-548-6707 or drop us a line – [email protected] – to see how we can help you. Wyoming Ghost Stories features many local landmarks BY BRAD DEVEREAUX A scary book from 1989 that stirs up old fears and tells tales of supernatural encounters within the cowboy state was re-published in 2008. Wyoming Ghost Stories by Debra D. Munn was published in 2008 by Riverbend publishing of Helena. It contains first-hand accounts of 26 bone-chilling tales of ghost sightings and encounters in Wyoming. The stories were originally published in the 1989 book, Ghosts on the Range by Munn. The said to be true stories, whose subjects are star-crossed lovers, murderers and the murdered, miners and cowboys and Native Americans, are all carefully researched and authenticated by interviews with the people who have witnessed the unknown and unexplained, according to a Riverbend press release. The book contains stories about the ghost of “the candy man” Ted Louie which is said to hang out at the Shoshone Bar, spirits witnessed by the staff of Rocky Mountain High School in Byron and tales about the helpful ghost in a red flannel shirt, said to be the spirit of a young boy who got lost and died near Trapper Creek in the Big Horn Mountains. Other stories come from Casper, Cheyenne, Chugwater, Cody, Greybull, Laramie, Meeteetse, Powell, Rawlins and Wheatland, among others. Of the 26 tales, nine take place in northwest Wy- 70 E. Main, Lovell oming. The book is available for purchase at the publisher’s Website, www.riverbendpublishing.com. 8 East Main • Lovell, Wyoming 82431 • 307-548-2703 • www.bighornfederal.com WELCOME TO MUSTANG DAYS! The Lovell Area Chamber of Commerce invites you to take in some of our area attractions while you’re visiting For more information, call the chamber office at 548-7552 or visit our website www.lovellchamber.com Historical 8 | The Lovell Chronicle | June 18, 2009 Those were the days … www.LovellChronicle.com Welcome to Lovell Your hat belongs at home Welcome toys! Mustang Da and Mustang Days! yable weekend! Have a safe and enjo Haskell Funeral Home 605 E. Main • 548-7678 COURTESY PHOTO Lovell once had many service stations in town. Here, Lynn Beddes poses at Goldie Johnson’s Husky station in 1964. The station was located at Main and Nevada where the Downtown Mural Park now lies. Beddes worked for Johnson for around 30 years, off and on, according to his wife, Lois. Have a news tip? Contact the Lovell Chronicle … 548-2217 or [email protected] Happy Mustang Days! Sign-up TODAY for Absolutely FREE Checking And Get A FREE Gift! ere Wh U YO ! RST FI are Be Involved in your community Lovell Office 284 E. Main Street www.lovellbank.com (307) 548-2751 Powell Office 245 E. 1st Street www.powellbank.com (307) 754-2201 Cody Office 1507 8th Street www.codybank.com (307) 587-3800 A hot and cold deli, featuring WonderRoast chicken, Chester Fried chicken, salads, donuts, cakes, cookies and so much more! A wonderful selection of fresh fruits and vegetables in our produce section, great for picnics and B-B-Q’s! A tradition of progress, service, and hometown pride, we’ve been part of the Lovell community for 62 years, giving our customers personal, quality service. That’s been the trademark of the Red Apple Supermarket (and Big Horn IGA and Big Horn Market before that) throughout our 62 years in the grocery business in Lovell. The drive-through or walk-in C&R Liquor Store stocked with a pleasing selection! 9 E. Main • Lovell Where YOU are FIRST! Take care of all of your photo needs with our Fujifilm photo maker.