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Yellowstone National Park History
People have visited and lived in the area we now call
Yellowstone National Park since the end of the last Ice Age, about
11,000 years ago. We don't know very much about these early people, but
it is fun to imagine what kind of Yellowstone they might have lived in.
When they were here, the glaciers that once blanketed Yellowstone in a
mile thick layer of ice had melted away leaving only the mountaintops
covered with snow and ice. In those days the temperature was much colder
than it is in Yellowstone today. However, 10,000 years ago lodgepole
pine forests and aspen groves were starting to grow. Animals found in
Yellowstone today such as elk, bison, black bear, bighorn sheep, and
coyotes were present at that time. But there were other animals that we
don't currently see, such as camels and sloths. At the close of the last
Ice Age, about 8,500 years ago, temperatures warmed. Some animals like
the wooly mammoth were better suited for colder and wetter conditions
and became extinct while others adapted to the warmer environment.
These
animals served as the food source for early people inhabiting the
Yellowstone region. We think these people were nomadic hunters,
following large herds of animals like elk and bison. Stone tools and
projectile points made from rocks are but a few of the material clues
indicating these people's
presence. As the climate changed, American
Indians continued to live off this land by hunting for game and foraging
for plants. The Yellowstone country also provided another important
resource for these early people-obsidian! They quarried this stone to
make tools such as spear points. As proof to its quality and value,
Yellowstone obsidian was widely transported overland east and west of
the Rocky Mountains and has been found as far away as Ohio.
As long as 11,000 years ago, American Indians created
trails across the Yellowstone landscape. What is now called the "Bannock
Trail" was probably a system of trail-ways that made up a complex route
leading to and from the Yellowstone country. American Indians used these
trails for easier access to the wealth of animals, plants, and minerals
found here. Evidence of the "Bannock Trail" can still be seen today. The
existence of such trails, as well as the arrival of the horse in the
late 1600s, and eventually guns, gave other benefits to the American
Indians. For example, game animals could be hunted more easily. Oral
traditions of the American Indian tribes tell us that Yellowstone's
geyser basins were also important destinations for ceremonial,
medicinal, and practical reasons. American Indians tell us that their
ancestors did not fear the geysers, but rather respected the possible
danger they represented.
The Sheep Eaters, a group of Shoshone Indians, chose not
to use horses. They lived in mountainous terrain and probably thought
dogs could better handle that environment. Since the Sheep Eaters had
neither horses nor guns, they found it difficult to compete with other
groups of American Indians such as the Blackfeet, Crow, Sioux, and Nez
Perce who also visited the Yellowstone country. The Sheep Eaters lived
in small family groups of ten to twenty people and traveled by foot,
hunting with the help of their dogs. Their name, Sheep Eaters, gives us
a clue as to one of the animals they hunted. Their bows, made from the
horns of bighorn sheep and decorated with porcupine quills, were
considered among the finest bows anywhere in the Yellowstone country and
were a prized item of trade among Plains Indians.
When the first Euro-Americans arrived, the Sheep Eaters
were noted as inhabitants of Yellowstone. French-Canadian fur trappers
and traders were the next visitors to the Yellowstone region. They
observed groups of American Indians, such as the Blackfeet and Flathead.
The tribes they traded with probably shared descriptions of
Yellowstone's wonders with them. There is no evidence that these
trappers and traders actually witnessed any of these wonders themselves.
In 1806, a portion of the Lewis and Clark Expedition led by William
Clark passed just to the north of Yellowstone, but not actually through
it. They did not hear of the area's geysers and hot springs, although
American Indians did tell them about the great lake to the south, now
known as Yellowstone Lake. Clark would later mention the Yellowstone
area in his journals and included one hot spring area on his map, a
place he called "Hot Spring Brimstone." He must have gotten his
information later from John Colter, a member of the Expedition, who
traveled into Yellowstone, as well as from other trappers and explorers.
Near
the end of the Lewis and Clark Expedition in 1806, John Colter went to
work for the Missouri Fur Trading Company. During the following year he
was sent on a 500-mile journey through untracked country with hopes of
setting up trade with several tribes. On this dangerous and solitary
adventure, Colter trekked through Yellowstone. He is believed to be the
first Euro-American to see Yellowstone Lake and witness some of the hot
springs that would someday become Yellowstone National Park. Between
1822-1840, other trappers came to this region. They came in search of
the great flat-tailed rodent, the beaver, whose pelts were in great
demand. The pelts were used to make stylish beaver felt hats such as the
one Abraham Lincoln wore. These trappers returned to more civilized
areas with more than just beaver pelts. They also brought back stories
of the hot springs, geysers, and other strange wonders they had found.
One
of the best known trappers was Jim Bridger (pictured). Among other
things, he was famous for telling tall tales. He spoke of rivers in
Yellowstone "that ran so fast they got hot on the bottom" and of being
able to see "Hell bubbling up" and witnessing "peetrifaction." His
stories were exaggerated, but they were not total lies. In Yellowstone,
there are warm rivers, hot water, and mud that boils and bubbles, and
there is a huge petrified forest. Still, it's no wonder that most people
reading stories like these in eastern newspapers dismissed them as fairy
tales and lies. The fur trapping business could not last forever. After
thirty years of trapping, beavers almost became extinct. The beaver felt
hat also went out of style, replaced with a more popular silk hat. The
combination of these factors meant the end of the colorful era of the
trapper. The tales of their stories, however, would be rediscovered many
years later.
During the next twenty years, Euro-Americans rarely
visited Yellowstone. The 1860s, however, brought a new kind of
hunter-the prospector. Once again the quiet corners of Yellowstone were
probed, this time by prospectors and miners searching for gold. Although
most never found the riches they were looking for, they did see
Yellowstone's wonders. They provided a wealth of information, including
one of the first maps of the Yellowstone area. It was published in 1865,
thanks to a prospector named Walter DeLacy. Also, like the trappers
before them, prospectors told stories of what they had seen. These
magical stories excited, inspired, and even compelled other people to
visit the area for themselves. In the summer of 1869 an expedition to
explore the upper Yellowstone River was proposed and then cancelled due
to trouble with American Indians and lack of military escort. Three of
the members-determined Montanans-decided to make the journey on their
own. Despite dire warnings, they set off into the wilderness with such
parting comments as: "Good-bye, boys, look out for your hair!", "It's
the next thing to suicide", "If you get into a scrap, remember I warned
you!" This was not an encouraging start, to say the least.
Folsom, Cook, and Peterson-the three expedition
members-entered Yellowstone near what is now the north entrance of the
park. During their trip they explored the Hot Spring Brimstone that the
trapper John Colter had mentioned. Here, Cook almost ended up in a steam
vent that they later discovered was 194F. They visited Tower Fall and
stood in awe on the rim of the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone,
describing it as a "masterpiece of nature's handiwork." They spent
several days along the shores of Yellowstone Lake and visited both the
Lower and Midway geyser basins where their reaction to Great Fountain
Geyser was to throw up their hats and yell with all their might! After
36 days in the wilderness-and maybe to the surprise of their friends-the
expedition returned safely home. They had many stories to tell, but Cook
was skeptical that any magazine would be interested and that their story
would be dismissed as "the too vivid imagination of a typical Rocky
Mountain liar". Their expedition, however, contributed much to the
overall exploration of the Yellowstone region. A descriptive magazine
article and an improved map of the area provoked intense interest among
a number of Montana's leading citizens.
By August of 1870, several of those citizens had put
together their own expedition led by Surveyor-General Henry D. Washburn.
The expedition also included politician and business promoter Nathaniel
P. Langford and attorney Cornelius Hedges. Later these men would prove
instrumental in the establishment of Yellowstone National Park. The
Washburn expedition followed the same general route taken by the 1869
party, with a few exceptions. They took the eastern rather than the
western route around Yellowstone Lake and visited the Upper Geyser Basin
as well as Midway and Lower Geyser Basins. By the end of the expedition,
they had named Tower Fall, descended into the Grand Canyon of the
Yellowstone and measured it to be 1050 feet below the rim, climbed
several peaks, and reached the fabled Firehole (Upper Geyser Basin).
Here they were welcomed by the eruption of a geyser 100 feet into the
air. It erupted regularly during their stay-and they named it Old
Faithful. This trip gathered even more publicity than the 1869 venture.
Several articles were written and Langford went on a speaking tour in
the East that included Washington D.C. All this publicity resulted in
the funding for an official exploration of Yellowstone-the 1871 Hayden
Expedition. Led by Ferdinand V. Hayden, head of what would become the
U.S. Geological Survey, the 1871 expedition was more thorough than the
previous ones. Hayden enlisted the help of two artists and three
photographers on this trip. They brought back a new kind of evidence in
the form of colorful paintings and real life photographs. For the first
time people could see what previously could only be described to them.
The existence of Yellowstone could no longer be denied. It was not
fantasy. It was real! Only a few years after the close of the Civil War,
Americans began a new fight-one to preserve this special place. It would
not be easy. In the words of Nathaniel P. Langford: "Our purpose to
create a park can only be accomplished by untiring work and concerted
action in a warfare against the incredulity and unbelief of our national
legislators when our proposal shall be presented for their approval.
Nevertheless, I believe we can win the battle."
Supported
by railroad companies, and with assistance from members of the Washburn
expedition and others, Ferdinand V. Hayden promoted legislation in
Congress in 1871 and 1872 to protect approximately two million acres of
the land "lying near the headwaters of the Yellowstone River". On March
1, 1872, President Ulysses S. Grant signed the law declaring that this
area would forever be preserved: "dedicated and set apart as a public
park or pleasuring ground for the benefit and enjoyment of the people."
The world's first national park had been born!
Unfortunately, this national inspiration soon became a
national headache. The difficulties were considerable. The idea was so
fresh and original that there were no references to draw upon, no
blueprints to follow, and no examples to observe which would provide
direction for how such a park should be managed and maintained. Also,
the area was remote, inaccessible and vast-the size of the states of
Delaware and Rhode Island combined. The United States had recently
fought a civil war, and funds to support a national park were
nonexistent. In fact, Yellowstone had actually been presented to
Congress as a preserve that could be run cost-free under the control of
the Secretary of the Interior-an illusion that was far from the real
situation. Imagine that this situation had been dumped in your lap and
was now your problem to solve. How would you proceed? The Secretary's
response was to secure someone to oversee the new park-a superintendent.
It was a stopgap measure at best, and Yellowstone would experience five
different superintendents during its first fourteen years.
The first superintendent, Nathaniel P. Langford, had
been a member of the 1870 Washburn Expedition and an advocate to
preserve Yellowstone. There was no money available to offer him a salary
for this new position, so he had to make his living elsewhere. This left
Langford with little time to run the park, and he entered it only twice
during his five years as superintendent. The first time was as a guest
on the second Hayden Expedition in 1872, and his second took place in
1874 to evict a man named Matthew McGuirk. McGuirk claimed to own the
Boiling River-one of the park's hot springs rumored to have healing
powers. Imagine how frustrating and difficult it would have been to be
in Langford's position. He had no salary, no funding for the park, and
no legal way to enforce protection for its wildlife
and geologic features. Political pressure, which took the guise of
accusing Langford of neglect, forced the removal of Yellowstone's first
superintendent in 1877. He was replaced by Philetus W. Norris.
Norris must have been a man who enjoyed challenges, for
he essentially volunteered for the position, after traveling through
Yellowstone and witnessing its problems first-hand. In June 1878,
Congress finally approved a salary for the park's superintendent, as
well as minimal funds "to protect, preserve, and improve the Park." It
was only $10,000 a year, but Norris made good use of it. In 1878, Luther
"Yellowstone" Kelly, a frontier scout, described travel through
Yellowstone in the following account:
"In the chill mist of early morning, we passed like ghosts along
a rude road into the geyser basin . . .the trail had disappeared and
we were treading a crust that sounded hollow and was hot to touch. I
dismounted and led my horse carefully around the thin places for
fear he would break through and scald his legs. . .at this time
there were practically no trails in the park aside from game trails,
only a rough track connecting the geyser basin with Mammoth Hot
Springs."
When Norris arrived in 1877, there were approximately 32 miles of
roads and 108 miles of trails. By the time he left in 1882, there were
five times as many roads and twice as many trails. The roads were crude
and many described them as only "fair" wagon trails. Still, they
provided access to "the land of wonders."
Norris
also hired Harry Yount (nicknamed "Rocky Mountain Harry" - pictured ) to
control poaching and vandalism in the park. Yount spent one winter alone
in a cabin in the Lamar Valley. He was isolated in a vast wilderness,
with deep snow, howling wind, and driving cold. His primary companions
were the herds of animals he was to protect and the poachers he was
single-handedly charged to control! It was a difficult job for one
person and Yount resigned the following fall. In his letter of
resignation he wrote:
"I do not think that any one man . . .is what is needed or can
prove effective for certain necessary purposes, but a small and
reliable police force of men. . .is what is really the most
practicable way of seeing that the game is protected from wanton
slaughter, the forests from careless use of fire, and the
enforcement of all the other laws, rules, and regulations for the
protection and improvement of the park."
Today, Harry Yount is considered the very first national
park ranger. Norris was removed from his post in 1882 due to political
maneuvering. Three additional superintendents followed, but none proved
effective in stopping the destruction of Yellowstone's magnificent
natural resources. By 1886 the park was in great danger. It was only
fourteen years old, had never been adequately financed or maintained,
and was no longer protected by virtue of being unknown. Poachers
slaughtered the wildlife. Visitors and souvenir vendors chipped away at
the geyser cones and travertine terraces. Vandals purposely set forest
fires, squatters illegally occupied land within the park, and delicate
thermal features became wishing wells-or trashcans. Congress, tired of
the ceaseless problems, refused to allocate additional funding. Under
authority given by Congress, the Secretary of the Interior requested
help from the Secretary of War for the management of Yellowstone. On an
evening in August 1886, 50 soldiers of Company M, First United States
Cavalry from Fort Custer, Montana Territory, marched into Mammoth Hot
Springs, to begin making "order out of chaos". Most of the soldiers came
from dry and dusty duty on southwest or western plains and some had
never seen mountains or snow, not to mention geysers and hot springs.
Many soldiers considered Yellowstone a good duty station. The men of the
"snowshoe cavalry" especially enjoyed their rugged life and often
volunteered to serve at remote snowshoe cabins. (They called them
snowshoes, we call them skis.) No doubt the work was often hard,
isolated, and dangerous, but the rewards were plentiful as well.
Private Edwin Kelsey described his life in a letter
dated December 3, 1898:
 "Left
here (Old Faithful area) for the post (Ft. Yellowstone) the Sunday
before Thanksgiving. . .I made 26 miles the first day, staying all
night at Norris Station. The next morning it was 22 degrees below
zero, but I pulled out for the Post, which I reached about two p.m.
after a cold hard ride of 20 miles. There is something about life in
the wilderness that fascinates me. I saddle my beast, and go off on
long rides through the forest where everything is so quiet that one
can almost hear the solitude."
Troops enforced park regulations vigorously, patrolling
on horseback during the summer and on skis during the winter. Their most
persistent problem was controlling poachers. During the latter part of
the 1800s, bison had been nearly exterminated from the American West and
the last free-ranging herd had taken refuge in the wilds of Yellowstone.
Unfortunately, this was a bit like going out of the fire into the frying
pan, as the activities of poachers were a constant threat to these last
remaining animals. The maximum punishment the Army could impose for this
crime was to confiscate a poacher's belongings and banish him from the
park. However, it proved nearly impossible to prevent him from
returning. Most poachers were local residents who knew the area well and
could slip in and out of the park boundaries without being noticed. In
the spring of 1894, Army officers learned that an infamous bison poacher
named Edgar Howell was camped in Yellowstone's Pelican Valley. Howell
was caught literally red-handed, blood staining his hands as he skinned
a bison he had just killed. Soldiers escorted him back to Army
headquarters in Mammoth Hot Springs, where they intended to hold Howell
for as long as possible in the guard house. As luck would have it, en
route, they encountered a group of visitors, one of whom was a prominent
reporter of the New York magazine, Forest and Stream. Appalled at
hearing about the minor punishment Howell would receive for his poaching
activities, the reporter wired the story to his editor.
An old saying contends that "the pen is mightier than
the sword". This was certainly the case here! The story caused a
national outcry and within two months Congress passed the National Park
Protection Act (also known as the Lacey Act) to "protect the birds and
animals in Yellowstone National Park, and to punish crimes in said park,
and for other purposes." No longer were the Army's hands tied-it was now
possible to prosecute those who committed crimes against the park's
wildlife. In the fall of 1886, troops constructed Camp Sheridan near the
Mammoth Hot Springs. Although roughly built, it provided adequate
shelter from one of the region's worst winters on record. Five years
later, the Army began work on a more permanent post, christened Fort
Yellowstone. Construction spanned 22 years, beginning in 1891 with a
guardhouse and ending in 1913 with a chapel. Many of the buildings of
Fort Yellowstone are still used today as the park's main headquarters
and administration buildings, and as housing for park staff.
It was becoming obvious that a separate agency was needed to manage
the steadily increasing number of American national parks and monuments.
By 1914, there were thirty such sites, including Yellowstone. Each was
managed separately, resulting in a lack of direction for the system as a
whole. There was also a steady flow of visitors clamoring for
information and interpretation of these special places. The National
Park Service Act, passed on August 16, 1916, created the National Park
Service and charged the new agency "to conserve the scenery and the
natural and historic objects and the wildlife therein and to provide for
the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave
them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations." In 1918 the
Cavalry at last left Yellowstone, passing on responsibility for its care
to the new agency. The first ranger force, although composed of only 21
people, was experienced, capable, and dedicated. In fact, many were
cavalrymen who chose to remain in the park. Today the flat-brimmed hats
worn by national park rangers are modeled from the Army campaign hats
and serve as a salute to the Army's contributions. Tourism to
Yellowstone continued to flourish, jumping from 300 people in 1872 to
5,000 in 1883. This was largely due to the arrival of the Northern
Pacific Railroad at the North Entrance of the park. Additional rail
lines to other park entrance points followed on the Northern Pacific's
heels. Once at the park, visitors could pay approximately $40 to embark
on a 5 day adventure through "Wonderland". They traveled by
stagecoaches, surrey carts, and "Tallyho Wagons", especially designed
for use in Yellowstone.
There
was also increasing pressure to allow the use of a "new-fangled" form of
transportation, known as the automobile! Park officials were certain
that allowing these new machines into the park would spell trouble. For
one thing, the roads were rough and very hazardous; for another, they
were certain to cause chaos and conflict with the horses used so widely
throughout the park. Finally, on April 21, 1915, Secretary of the
Interior Franklin K. Lane authorized private automobiles to officially
enter Yellowstone, beginning later that same year. By the close of the
first season, 958 automobiles, carrying 3,513 people had entered the
park. The expected conflict between horses and automobiles did indeed
arise, eventually resulting in the decision that horses would no longer
be permitted on the park roads. By the 1920s, people were being
encouraged to "See America First" and the world was going on wheels.
Visitors flocked to the national parks, eager to learn more about them.
Recognizing the need and opportunity for education in the parks, the
Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial donated funds for the construction of
four trailside museums in Yellowstone. They were located at points of
major interest in the park (Old Faithful, Norris, Madison, and Fishing
Bridge), each separated by (at that time) "an easy day's journey".
Construction began first at Old Faithful in 1928 and the museum opened
its doors in 1929.
Later that year, on October 29, our country slid into massive panic.
On Black Tuesday, as it's come to be known, the stock market crashed,
and Americans plunged headlong into the Great Depression. The United
States government established the Civilian Conservation Corps as a
federal relief program for the unemployed. The CCC worked in Yellowstone
from 1933 through the summer of 1941. They provided general park
maintenance, including trail and road construction, brush control, and
clean-up duties. As our country entered World War II, Yellowstone fought
a few battles of its own. Many of the rangers and members of the
Civilian Conservation Corps enlisted in the military. There were few
visitors due to the rationing of gasoline and other commodities. Funding
was redirected to the war effort, leaving a backlog of maintenance needs
and park projects half-completed. Once the war ended, visitation jumped
again, breaking the one million mark in 1948, and placing heavy stress
on neglected facilities. In 1955, the National Park Service began a
program to address the accumulation of maintenance needs, including
adequate housing for park employees, and the construction of modern
public facilities. It was called "Mission 66", because all projects were
scheduled for completion by the 50th Anniversary of the National Park
Service in 1966. The first completed Mission 66 project in Yellowstone
was the creation of Canyon Village, opening in 1958.
Despite more comfortable traveling conditions, Yellowstone remains a
place of vast wildness, where nature reigns in all of its beauty and
violence. This was never more evident than during a quiet night in
August of 1959 when one of the severest earthquakes recorded on the
North American continent, struck just west of the park. At a magnitude
of 7.5, it sent a 20 foot high wall of water surging down narrow Madison
Canyon, caused half of a 7,600 foot high mountain to collapse, and
killed 28 people. In Yellowstone, the earthquake affected the function
of geysers and hot springs. Slides and boulders blocked large sections
of park roads, and phone lines to Old Faithful and West Yellowstone were
instantly broken. Visitors were evacuated from the massive Old Faithful
Inn as its timbers creaked and groaned, and the great stone fireplace
and chimney crashed down upon the dining room floor. This event has
since been remembered as "the night the mountain fell". As our country
embarked on a decade of social change, revolution, and innovation in the
1960s, the management of Yellowstone also experienced vast change.
During the winter of 1963, six snowmobiles entered the park. (This was
the start of a new mode of recreation, which has ballooned to over
140,000 winter visitors each year. In fact, the large number of
snowmobiles is currently cause for growing concern over the impact they
make on Yellowstone National Park. Managers are in the process of
finalizing a winter use plan for the park.)
In
the 1960s the management of Yellowstone's wildlife also became
revolutionized. For decades, park managers had actively controlled the
park's elk and bison herds. The elk's chief natural predator, the wolf,
had long ago been exterminated from the park, and subsequently managers
set elk population limits based upon the perceived range carrying
capacity. When these limits were reached, the animals were actively
killed or culled to reduce the herd size. In 1963, a national park
advisory group published the Leopold Report, a document that helped
establish the framework for park management, which is still used today.
The plan called for a "hands-off" rather than "hands-on" approach to
natural resource management. In other words, natural processes,
including predation and natural culling of wildlife would be allowed to
occur, with as little interference from humans as possible. Stemming
from this decision, Yellowstone closed garbage dumps within the park,
implemented a new bear management plan, and eventually reintroduced
wolves into Yellowstone in 1995 to restore natural balance to the
Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. Natural balance also called for
recognition of the role fire plays in creating the landscape. Fires in
Yellowstone had been suppressed since the arrival of the U.S. Army in
1886. Over eighty years later, the park initiated a natural fire
management plan, calling for some natural fires to be allowed to run
their courses. The philosophy of natural fire management was severely
tested during Yellowstone's Summer of Fire in 1988. During that long,
hot summer, 36 percent of the park (793,880 acres) were affected,
leading to a major review of past fire management policies and extensive
research on fire ecology.
One hundred and thirty years have passed since Yellowstone became the
world's first national park, and we continue to learn from past
mistakes, as well as from our past successes. Today approximately 3
million visitors from around the world travel to Yellowstone every year.
Think of what our country has pioneered-the legacy we have begun! An
idea that began in tenuous balance has flowered into far-reaching
inspiration. National parks are considered by many to be America's
greatest gift to the world; in fact, Yellowstone and the United States
National Park System continue to serve as models for other countries as
they strive to protect their own natural and cultural treasures. One
international visitor expressed what many others feel: "Yellowstone may
be located in the United States, but it belongs to the world." As we
move forward into the 21st century, new challenges await our national
parks and will test our spirit. We must continue to change our way of
managing resources as we increase our knowledge of natural systems.
Events that are happening in Yellowstone today will soon be classified
as "history". |