News from the Red Caboose
Transcription
News from the Red Caboose
Winter 2008 News from the Red Caboose Friends of the Yellowstone Gateway Museum Livingston, Montana A n n u Hear ye, hear ye! You’re invited to listen to Paul Wiley of Bozeman as he reads from his new book, “The Irish General—Thomas Francis Meagher.” Thursday, April 10th at 7:00 pm at the museum Civil War buffs will enjoy learning about Meagher’s Civil War battles as well as the details of the early workings of Montana Government. I n s i d e t h i s i s s u e : MAM Convention Notes from the Museum Director Anton Miller, Blacksmith Yellowstone Park Starts at Depot Buffalo Bill Try-Outs Membership & Publications a l m e e t i n g L i v i n g s t o n F e b r t o u a r y 2 8 H o s t M A M 2 0 0 8 Nearly 100 historians will gather in Livingston, Montana March 6, 7 and 8 th , 2008 to share the secrets of a successful museum in our vast state. Yellowstone Gateway Museum will host the affair which will be held at Best Western Yellowstone Inn. Montana Association of Museum Board members will gather at the Museum on March 5 th to launch the annual event. Title this year is “On Track with your Museum; Education, Exhibits & Public Interaction”. The Conference begins with a bus trip that will include Paradise Valley history and the new Yellowstone National Park Heritage Center in Gardiner. The buses leave at 9 a.m. Thursday, March 6 from the Yellowstone Inn. Reservations are neces sary. Bag lunch is provided with registra tion. The group will return to the Yellow stone Inn at 4 p.m. There are a number of workshops being offered. You may find them on the a s s o c i a t i o n ’ s w e b s i t e , www.montanamuseums.org/conference, or by calling the museum. Don Williams, Sen ior Furniture Conservator at the Smith sonian Museum Conservation Institute is scheduled to participate. A banquet, silent auction, gallery, pub crawl and two recep tions are on the agenda. The 2008 MAM Conference is being locally arranged and hosted by Brian Sparks, Director of Yellowstone Gateway Museum, and Park County Board of Mu seum Directors and Friends of the Yellow stone Gateway Museum. Everyone is welcome to partici pate, so please call the museum for registra tion information. Patty Miller , 2 0 0 8 C o n f e r e n c e From the director's desk.. Astonishing! There is no other word for it. The accomplishments of so many, with so much assistance from faithful members, vol unteers, board members and staff. We’ve been lucky to have two volunteers helping with our photo scanning processes: Rob Park and Jim Peaco. We were awarded a $104,000 IMLS Museums for American “Sustaining Cultural Heritage” Whithorn Grant. Jon Watson was hired as its technician. Over 25 volunteers were recruited to support the grant by the very dedicated Donna Armentaro. Ken Burns of Florentine Films used two of the museum’s photos for an upcoming Na tional Park documentary. Two more photos from the Whithorn Collection were used in the summer 2007 edition of Montana: The Maga zine of Western History in an article on Rockefeller’s visit to the Silver Tip Ranch. Over 400 school children, in grades 17 were served by museum’s educational programs. . Bundles of gratitude to all of you for support ing us with your dollars and time and please continue! We are always seeking to improve our facility, technology and to preserve and improve our collection. It’s gratifying to see the efforts and support of so many preserving a historic legacy for future generations. With sincere thanks, Brian Sparks MONTANA ASSOCIATION OF MUSEUMS INVITES YOU TO THE ANNUAL 2008 M.A.M. Conference AT THE BEST WESTERN INN & CONVENTION CENTER LIVINGSTON, MONTANA MARCH 6—8 _______________________________ Visit the association website for details: Www.montanamuseums.org/conference Or call Brian Sparks at 406.222.4184 Don’t forget! YELLOWSTONE GATEWAY MUSEUM Annual Meeting February 28, 7:00 PM at the Livingston Public Library Community Room The Friends of YGM Annual Meeting, Feb., 28th at 7 PM At the Livingston Public Library Community Room The evening’s activities will include the election of four board members, review of by-laws, annual report and a presentation on the Whithorn Archiving Project by YGM Archivist Jon Watson. With the MAM conference only a week later, a recap of events will also be highlighted. There will be door prizes, and light snacks and refreshments will be provided. If you’re a member, PLEASE ATTEND. If you’re not a member this is the perfect time to become involved. As someone once said, “Don’t leave everything up to us —-you might not be happy with the result!“ ________________________________________________________________ BIG THINGS A’HAPPENIN’---AND WE NEED YOU! Unless you’ve been around your Yellowstone Gateway Museum lately, you might not believe this old building could ever again be so busy during the “off-season.” Particularly with the coming of the Whithorn archiving project, volunteers have been joining staff every weekday since November (and occasionally on weekends) in what most of them could describe as “joyous” review of photographs and other materials from the Whithorn Collection. And if inspecting old photos and solving minor mysteries isn’t one’s “cup of tea,” there’s been plenty of less sedentary service---running errands, sorting and testing Christmas decorations, moving equipment and boxes of books---to keep us happily busy, out of love and appreciation for the YGM and its history. But we can’t expect that same two-dozen volunteers to maintain that schedule all Winter and Spring, much less through the museum’s open Summer season---when we all have lots of other things to do, not the least of which is to volunteer on the front desk and in other capacities at YGM---and certainly not for the full two-years that the Whithorn project is slated to take! THAT’S WHERE YOU COME IN! As we progress toward longer and warmer days, the current volunteer crew will need relief, in the form of 2 to 4 hours on a given weekday. And as we move into what promises to be a very busy Summer, we’ll be presented with more and more opportunities to take part in various museum activities, duties and events. If you’d like to find out how you can help, please contact me (222-5779) or Brian (2224184) or the YGM’s Volunteer Coordinator, Donna Armentaro (222-1274), or e-mail me at rdv59047@wispwest.net. -Rick VanAken 2 Clyde Park Blacksmith Advertises in Polk Directory—1910 Anton Miller was born in Elsegaard, Denmark in 1866, married in Copenhagen in 1891, and immigrated to the United States in 1894. As a blacksmith he found work at the coke ovens in Timberline and Chestnut, Montana, near today’s Bozeman Pass. The Millers had four children, moved to Clyde Park in 1903 where Anton owned and operated a saloon. In addition to building his own blacksmith shop, barn, and two homes (one of which still stands). He served the young city as a Constable and Deputy Sheriff. Anton was a large man, six feet tall and weighed over two hundred pounds. He had a difficult time adapting to modern times and refused to convert his forge from coke to electricity. He locked up his shop during the WWII, a victim of gas and tire shortages. During the early years he advertised a great deal in Clyde Park and Livingston newspapers. See the Polk Directory ad. Anton died in 1951, leaving behind his very large and tight knit family. Cliff Miller is a grandson and owns Anton’s brass knuckles, and has vivid memories of this very big member of his family. - Patty Miller fffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff This Newsletter Sponsor: The Friends of the Gateway Museum acknowledge the extraordinary gift of time and talent given to us by a very competent and distinguished professional. Terry Profoto of Sage Consulting and The Mortgage Firm shared several hours with the museum staff and friends gently delivering a useful technology program. Ms. Profoto lives and works in Bozeman, however her knowledge base and contacts of and in the Livingston community are great. Collectively, we are indebted to her. 3 YELLOWSTONE PARK STARTS AT THE LIVINGSTON DEPOT Can the case be made that Yellowstone Park starts at Livingston’s railroad Depot? What better authority than cover girl “Alice” who wrote in the 1885 “Alice’s Adventures in the New Wonderland” Northern Pacific brochure: “When we came to Livingston and had to change trains, leaving the main line for the National Park Branch, it seemed as though the one grand object of our journey was at last to be attained...we saw a lofty range of mountains covered with snow, we felt that we were indeed getting into a new world... The fact that we were approaching the famous Wonderland of the world was, however, of itself, sufficient to put us all on the qui vive….” (Fr.—exhilaration, ready for action). Even in pre-railroad days, the primary road to Yellowstone was through the Paradise Valley: “… the road following up the Yellowstone River being a pleasant and good one. For the following reasons the natural and most satisfactory way to visit the Park is to enter at Mammoth Hot Springs…(W.W. Wylie’s 1882 Yellowstone National Park Guide). The 1882 Wylie guide noted that the Northern Pacific Railroad was “rapidly advancing”. It contained only Bozeman business advertisers where travelers could get “outfitted” for the trip. Bozeman’s population at the time was around 800. There is no mention of Benson Landing on the river near present day Livingston. Nor is there any mention of the new city of Livingston that was about to sprout. The Wylie guide trumpeted that Bozeman was still going to be the proper “outfitting” place. But as reflected by Alice’s New Wonderland story three years later, tourists had visions of geysers dancing in their heads upon arriving at Livingston and were already beginning their National Park experience. The displacement of Bozeman as the main departure point was imminent. George Wakefield, “of Bozeman” in the Wylie guide, and his partner, Hoffman, proceeded to establish their stage company, not in Bozeman but at Livingston in 1883 and at Cinnabar where they could compete with other stages and outfitters soliciting Park passengers. A subsequent Wakefield Stage and Camping Co. advertising card promoted a 7 day Park Trip for $30 for 3 to 40 people on Concord stages and surreys. The defining role of Livingston in the Park experience was also noted in A.B. Guptill’s “Guide to Yellowstone Park” published by Haynes brothers in 1890: “Livingston, an enterprising Montana city, is located at the base…three miles from Livingston the road passes through the first canyon of the Yellowstone, or Gate of the Mountain, forming a natural entrance to the Upper Yellowstone Valley.” In 1896 it cost $5 for a round trip ticket from Livingston to Mammoth Hot Springs. Livingston kept improving its depots from ramshackle to wood sided to two storey brick to, as Waite writes, “The Northern Pacific built a new depot at Livingston, known as the “Gateway to Yellowstone” in 1902, at the same time the Park Branch was being extended from Cinnabar to Gardiner.” Reed and Stem were the architects and they also worked on Grand Central Station in New York City. In the late 1900’s and early 1900’s businesses in Livingston catered to the Park connection. A porter from the Park Hotel met each train (per Livingston’s first Polk Directory in 1904). There were fitting business names such as National Park Bank complete with a Geyser on its billheads. In 1903, National Park Laundry proudly proclaimed that they were located just opposite the “New Depot.” Schuber Drug on Main Street Livingston had specially printed sets of Yellowstone postcards printed in Germany in about 1906 with the finest printing of the day. These “Gateway City” postcards (there are at least 5 different views of this type) asserted the City’s role. The Gateway City was to even to become home to the Wylie Way permanent tent camp company, when it was purchased by Livingston businessman A.W. Miles and a “silent partner” in 1905. Wylie had begun the business in 1883 in Bozeman. (See Park County’s own Robert Goss’s excellent Making Concessions in Yellowstone” booklet for a detailed corporate history) Each year beginning in 1909 the Wiley Way published a colorful new tourist brochure. Shaw & Powell Camping Company also operated its tent camping.business from Livingston. Its elaborate 48 page brochure published in about 1912 Its elaborate 4 48 page brochure published in about 1912 features a full page photograph of the present Livingston Depot. Even with the merger of these two permanent camping companies, and the entry of automobiles into the Park in 1916, the center of operations remained in Livingston as the Yellowstone Park Camping Company. No other park entrance was competitive nor convenient during this period. Cody, as reflected by a real photo postcard of about 1900 vintage, was nothing more than a bunch of ramshackle western shacks and rough houses with only the hotel standing out like a beacon. From Cody, it required traversing a rough and windy Shoshone Road and then climbing steep Sylvan pass just to reach the Park boundary. In 1907-1910 the Oregon Short Line Railroad reached West Yellowstone and the town had its own depot. Prior to that time entry from the West Entrance required a stage trip from Monida’s railroad station with an overnight stay at the Dwell Hotel. The Gallatin Canyon route to West Yellowstone was only a rough wagon road beginning in about 1911. Public transportation along this route began to be developed by Karst. Railroad interest was confined to the Milwaukee Railroad which then built the Gallatin Gateway Inn in the late 1920’s to promote the Canyon entry point. (A good history of Yellowstone Park entrances is “Yellowstone by Train” by Thornton Waite (2006). Early Yellowstone Park travel numbers raise some interesting questions as to the economic impact of Park tourists. The 1926 Haynes Guide notes that prior to 1893, “travel varied from 1,000 to 5,000 annually.” Other figures were: 1893 5,438 1904 13,727 1896 4,659 1905 26,188 1900 8,928 1910 19,575 Most of these dedicated and adventurous visitors traveled through Livingston to get to Yellowstone National Park. Whether by tent camp or by the paradoxical luxury hotels built at the very edge of Wonderland’s wonders, the excitement and elation built and began, as it did for Alice, from the Livingston Depots in Gateway City. -Bob Jovick 5 WWW.FRIENDSOFYGM.ORG PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID f r i e n d s o f t h e y e l l o w s t o n e g a t e w a y m u s e u m LIVINGSTON, MT P.O. Box 815 118 West Chinook Street Livingston, MT 59047 Phone: 406-222-4184 Email: museum@ycsi.net Don’t forget! Friends annual meeting—February 28 WHITHORNS AT WORK This photograph represents the process at which Bill and Doris took to make reproductions of the original prints they would borrow from local resident’s personal collections. Bill became an expert at the process of copying and cropping originals long before the days of photocopies, scanners, and computers. Without Doris’s collecting and Bill’s reproduction techniques these photos could have been lost forever. Thank you, Whithorns! dddddddddddddddddddddddddd Whithorn Collection Technician, Jon Watson has thus far matched 1000 photographs to the images found in the Whithorn Publications. Of these, 550 have been scanned into the museum computer, and will forever be in our archives! On December 18, thirty friends celebrated Doris’s 92 birthday at the museum. When you see her, wish her well! 7 This is a photograph of cowboys auditioning for Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show. The photo has a date written on it of July 4th 1887 with the location unknown. Rumors have circulated around historians of the possibility they could have held “try-outs” around Montana, most notably the Hoppee Ranch, near the Cinnabar area. This photo could be the first solid evidence of this event! The names written on the photo are: John Guild, Tom Anson, Tude Hereford, Ben Steaton, H. Criteter, S. Carter, Will Harvey, C Earley, Charley Ingersoll, Allie Ingersoll, Gavin Barr, George Guild, Rob Hamilton, Willie Byrne, Dick Jones, G. Butler, Eddie Byrne, Tom Casto, Ruben Ingersoll, Frank Byrne, J. Edmunson, Will Stoll, Percy Allen, Oscar Quinn George Herford, Albert Byrne, and Bob Caverely. Does anyone recognize a name? _________________________________________________________________________________ Remembering Our Friend… Olga J. Fraser, 92, well known and Livingston matron, and widow of Don Fraser died December 16, 2007 at St. Vincent Health Care in Billings, Montana. In early 2007 Olga moved to Billings to be closer to her family. She was buried at Mountain View Cemetery in Livingston following a service at Holbrook United Methodist Church. Olga was born in Minot, ND where she received her education. After her 1933 graduation from high school, she attended Kinman Business College in WA. Her first bookkeeping job was at Livingston Laundry. In 1942 she married Don Fraser. The couple loved being a part of their community, especially the Yellowstone Gateway Museum. Their loyalty and support leave a lasting legacy. 6