The Yellowstone National Park Part 29
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_Trident, The_ (10,000)--Q-R: 14--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Trilobite Point_ (9,900)--F: 4--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Turret Mountain_ (10,400)--P: 14--1878--Characteristic.--Called by Captain Jones "Round-head or Watch Tower."
_Twin b.u.t.tes_ (8,400)--K: 14--1870--Washburn Party.--Characteristic.
_Washburn, Mt._ (10,000)--F: 9--1870--Washburn Party.--For General Henry Dana Washburn, chief of the Yellowstone Expedition of 1870.
General Washburn was born in Windsor, Vt., March 28, 1832. His parents moved to Ohio during his infancy. He received a common school education and at fourteen began teaching school. He entered Oberlin College, but did not complete his course. At eighteen he went to Indiana where he resumed school-teaching. At twenty-one he entered the New York State and National Law School, from which he graduated. At twenty-three he was elected auditor of Vermilion county, Indiana.
His war record was a highly honorable one. He entered the army as private in 1861 and left it as brevet brigadier-general in 1865. His service was mainly identified with the Eighteenth Indiana, of which he became colonel. He was in several of the western campaigns, notably in that of Vicksburg, in which he bore a prominent part. In the last year of the war he was with Sherman's army, and for a short time after its close was in command of a military district in southern Georgia. In 1864, he was elected to Congress over the Hon. Daniel W. Voorhees, and again, in 1866, over the Hon. Solomon W. Claypool. At the expiration of his second term he was appointed by President Grant, surveyor-general of Montana, which office he held until his death.
[Ill.u.s.tration: GEN. HENRY DANA WASHBURN.]
It was during his residence in Montana that the famous Yellowstone Expedition of 1870 took place. His part in that important work is perhaps the most notable feature of his career. As leader of the expedition he won the admiration and affection of its members. He was the first to send to Was.h.i.+ngton specimens from the geyser formations.
He ardently espoused the project of setting apart this region as a public park and was on his way to Was.h.i.+ngton in its interest when his career was cut short by death. The hards.h.i.+p and exposure of the expedition had precipitated the catastrophe to which he had long been tending. He left Helena in November, 1870, and died of consumption at his home in Clinton, Indiana, January 26, 1871.
General Washburn's name was given to this mountain by a unanimous vote of the party on the evening of August 28, 1870, as a result of the following incident related by Mr. Langford:
"Our first Sunday in camp was at Tower Creek. The forest around us was very dense, and we were somewhat at a loss in deciding what course we needed to follow in order to reach Yellowstone Lake. We had that day crossed a _fresh_ Indian trail, a circ.u.mstance which admonished us of the necessity of watchfulness so as to avoid disaster. While we were resting in camp, General Washburn, without our knowledge, and unattended, made his way to the mountain, from the summit of which, overlooking the dense forest which environed us, he saw Yellowstone Lake, our objective point, and carefully noted its direction from our camp. This intelligence was most joyfully received by us, for it relieved our minds of all anxiety concerning our course of travel, and dispelled the fears of some of our party lest we should become inextricably involved in that wooded labyrinth."
_White Peaks_ (9,800)--F : 4--1895--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Wild Cat Peak_ (9,800)--T : 8--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Yount Peak_ (Hayden, 11,700; Hague, 12,250)--Not on map.--1878--U. S.
G. S.--Source of the Yellowstone.--Named for an old trapper and guide of that region.
APPENDIX A.
III.
STREAMS.
[Map locations refer only to outlets, or to points where streams pa.s.s off the limits of the map. Alt.i.tudes refer to the same points, but are given only in the most important cases.]
_Agate Creek_--E : 10--1878--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Alum Creek_--H : 9--Name known prior to 1870--Characteristic.
_Amethyst Greek_--E : 12--1878--U. S. G. S.--Flows from Amethyst Mountain.
_Amphitheater Creek_--D : 13--1885--U. S. G. S.--From form of valley near its mouth.
_Antelope Creek_--E : 10--1870--Washburn Party--Characteristic.--This name is often applied locally to a tributary of the Yellowstone just above Trout Creek.
_Arnica Creek_--L : 8--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Aster Creek_--P : 7--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Astrigent Creek_--J : 12--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Atlantic Creek_--S : 13--1873--Jones--Flows from Two-Ocean-Pa.s.s down the Atlantic slope.
_Badger Creek_--P : 13--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Basin Creek_--Q : 9--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Bear Creek_--B : 7--1863--Party of prospectors under one Austin. On the way they found fair prospects in a creek on the east side of the Yellowstone, and finding also a hairless cub, called the gulch "Bear."--Topping.
_Bear Creek_--K : 11--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Beaver Creek_--O : 9--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Beaver Dam Creek_--O : 12--1871--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Bechler River_--R : 1--1872--U. S. G. S.--For Gustavus R. Bechler, topographer on the Snake River Division of the Hayden Expedition of 1872.
_Berry Creek_--U : 6--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Black-tail Deer Creek_--B : 8--Named prior to 1870--Characteristic.
_Bluff Creek_--H : 10--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Bog Creek_--H : 10--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Boone Creek_--T : 1--Named prior to 1870--For Robert Withrow, an eccentric pioneer of Irish descent, who used to call himself "Daniel Boone the Second."
_Bridge Creek_--K : 9--1871--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
"At one point, soon after leaving camp, we found a most singular natural bridge of the trachyte, which gives pa.s.sage to a small stream, which we called Bridge Creek."--Hayden.
"Natural Bridge" is really over a branch of Bridge Creek.
_Broad Creek_--F : 10--1871--Barlow--Characteristic.
_Buffalo Creek_--D : 11--Prior to 1870--Naming party unknown--Characteristic.
_Burnt Creek_--E : 10--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Cache Creek_--F : 13--1863--Prospecting party under one Austin were in camp on this stream when they were surprised by Indians, and all their stock stolen except one or two mules. Being unable to carry all their baggage from this point, they _cached_ what they could not place on the mules, or could not themselves carry. From this circ.u.mstance arose the name.
_Calfee Creek_--F : 13--1880--Norris--For H. B. Calfee, a photographer of note.
"Some seven miles above Cache Creek we pa.s.sed the mouth of another stream in a deep, narrow, timbered valley, which we named Calfee Creek, after the famous photographer of the Park. Five miles further on, we reached the creek which Miller recognized as the one he descended in retreating from the Indians in 1870, and which, on this account, we called Miller's Creek."--Norris.[CK]
[CK] Page 7, Annual Report Superintendent of the Park for 1880.
The Yellowstone National Park Part 29
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The Yellowstone National Park Part 29 summary
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