The Discovery of Yellowstone Park eBook

Nathaniel P. Langford
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 166 pages of information about The Discovery of Yellowstone Park.

The Discovery of Yellowstone Park eBook

Nathaniel P. Langford
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 166 pages of information about The Discovery of Yellowstone Park.

The question is frequently asked, “Who originated the plan of setting apart this region as a National Park?” I answer that Judge Cornelius Hedges of Helena wrote the first articles ever published by the press urging the dedication of this region as a park.  The Helena Herald of Nov. 9, 1870, contains a letter of Mr. Hedges, in which he advocated the scheme, and in my lectures delivered in Washington and New York in January, 1871, I directed attention to Mr. Hedges’ suggestion, and urged the passage by Congress of an act setting apart that region as a public park.  All this was several months prior to the first exploration by the U.S.  Geological Survey, in charge of Dr. Hayden.  The suggestion that the region should be made into a National Park was first broached to the members of our party on September 19, 1870, by Mr. Hedges, while we were in camp at the confluence of the Firehole and Gibbon rivers, as is related in this diary.  After the return home of our party, I was informed by General Washburn that on the eve of the departure of our expedition from Helena, David E. Folsom had suggested to him the desirability of creating a park at the grand canon and falls of the Yellowstone.  This fact was unknown to Mr. Hedges,—­and the boundary lines of the proposed park were extended by him so as to be commensurate with the wider range of our explorations.

The bill for the creation of the park was introduced in the House of Representatives by Hon. William H. Clagett, delegate from Montana Territory.  On July 9, 1894, William R. Marshall, Secretary of the Minnesota Historical Society, wrote to Mr. Clagett, asking him the question:  “Who are entitled to the principal credit for the passage of the act of Congress establishing the Yellowstone National Park?” Mr. Clagett replied as follows: 

Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, July 14th, 1894.

Wm. R. Marshall,

Secretary Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul, Minn.

Dear Sir:  Your favor of July 9th is just received.  I am glad that you have called my attention to the question, “Who are entitled to the principal credit for the passage of the act of Congress establishing the Yellowstone National Park?” The history of that measure, as far as known to me, is as follows, to-wit:  In the fall of 1870, soon after the return of the Washburn-Langford party, two printers at Deer Lodge City, Montana, went into the Firehole basin and cut a large number of poles, intending to come back the next summer and fence in the tract of land containing the principal geysers, and hold possession for speculative purposes, as the Hutchins family so long held the Yosemite valley.  One of these men was named Harry Norton.  He subsequently wrote a book on the park.  The other one was named Brown.  He now lives in Spokane, Wash., and both of them in the summer of 1871 worked in the New Northwest office at Deer Lodge.  When I learned from them in the late fall of 1870 or spring of 1871 what they intended to do, I remonstrated
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The Discovery of Yellowstone Park from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.