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Hayden Geological Survey of 1871

The Hayden Geological Survey of 1871 explored the region of northwestern Wyoming that later became Yellowstone National Park in 1872. It was led by geologist Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden. The 1871 survey was not Hayden's first, but it was the first federally funded geological survey to explore and further document features in the region soon to become Yellowstone National Park, and played a prominent role in convincing the U.S. Congress to pass the legislation creating the park. In 1894, Nathaniel P. Langford, the first park superintendent and a member of the Washburn-Langford-Doane Expedition which explored the park in 1870, wrote this about the Hayden expedition:

1871 Hayden Survey at Mirror Lake en route to East Fork of the Yellowstone River, August 24, 1871-W.H. Jackson photo

We trace the creation of the park from the Folsom-Cook expedition of 1869 to the Washburn expedition of 1870, and thence to the Hayden expedition (U. S. Geological Survey) of 1871, Not to one of these expeditions more than to another do we owe the legislation which set apart this "pleasuring-ground for the benefit and enjoyment of the people"

— Nathaniel P. Langford[1]

Origins

The 1871 Hayden survey had its roots in the Pacific Railroad Survey bill passed by Congress in 1853 to find the best routes for railroads from the Mississippi to the Pacific coast. The bill spawned an era of federally funded Great Surveys undertaken by the Department of the Interior after the Civil War that brought together explorers, engineers, scientists and topographers in a common effort to chart the western U.S. Hayden along with John Wesley Powell, Clarence King and George Wheeler were the leaders of these great surveys.[2]

In March 1871, a sum of $40,000 was appropriated by Congress to finance Hayden's fifth survey to explore mostly the territories of Idaho and Montana. Hayden was very familiar with Jay Cooke's desire to promote the Yellowstone region for the Northern Pacific Railroad and had attended Nathaniel P. Langford's January 1871 lecture in Washington D.C. on the Washburn-Langford-Doane Expedition to Yellowstone of the previous year.[3] The $40,000 that was granted for Hayden's expedition was not available until July 1, the beginning of the fiscal year; however, the determined Hayden was still able to organize and equip his expedition with the help of the US Army, Fort Bridger and the railroads. After the passage of the Sundry Civil bill, Hayden immediately applied to the Secretary of War for permission to draw on equipment, stores, and transportation at frontier army posts. This was authorized, together with a small escort "when deemed necessary and the public service will permit." Likewise, the Union Pacific and Central Pacific Railroads agreed to carry Hayden's men and equipment without cost.[3]

Hayden had an experienced assistant, James Stevenson. In 1866, Stevenson accompanied Hayden into the badlands of Dakota Territory in a search for minerals and fossils, and from that time on he was Hayden's assistant in every venture until the Hayden Survey was merged with those of King and Powell to form the U.S. Geological Survey in 1879.[4]

The two were now able to outfit and equip members of Hayden's survey at Fort D. A. Russell in Wyoming and transport the equipment, subsistence, wagons, and animals he would need by rail to Ogden, Utah, where a base camp had been set up in May on an old lake terrace a mile east of the city. During the weeks leading up to the expedition the scientists and other men were to make up the party that would venture into the Yellowstone region.[3]

In the spring of 1871, Hayden selected the members of the survey team, 32 in all, from among friends and colleagues, seven previous survey participants, and a few political patrons. Included in the party was William Henry Jackson, his photographer from his 1870 survey and Thomas Moran, a guest artist arranged by Jay Cooke.[5] Two of the members, the young mineralogist Albert Peale and the botanist George Allen, were respectively a student of Hayden's at the University of Pennsylvania and Hayden's Natural History professor at Oberlin College. Both Allen and Peale kept private journals of the expedition which when discovered in later years have brought great insight to the daily operations of the survey team.

Survey route

Map all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 
Download coordinates as: KML

The survey officially began on June 8, 1871 when it departed Ogden, Utah 41°13′40″N 111°57′40″W / 41.227744°N 111.961193°W / 41.227744; -111.961193 (Ogden, Utah), although many survey members were already making observations and collecting specimens while the team was assembling in Salt Lake City and then Ogden. The party traveled north, reaching Taylor's Bridge 43°29′30″N 112°01′57″W / 43.491775°N 112.032509°W / 43.491775; -112.032509 (Taylor's Bridge) (now Idaho Falls) on the Snake River on June 25, 1871. On June 30, 1871, the survey party had reached into Montana, camping just over the Continental Divide near Monida Pass 44°33′31″N 112°18′20″W / 44.55861°N 112.30556°W / 44.55861; -112.30556 (Monida Pass). Hayden and his survey party reached Virginia City, Montana 45°17′39″N 111°56′28″W / 45.294107°N 111.94123°W / 45.294107; -111.94123 (Virginia City, Montana) on July 4, 1871 and Fort Ellis near Bozeman, Montana, on July 10, 1871. By this time, Thomas Moran, the guest artist had joined the survey. At Fort Ellis, both George Allen, the botanist and Cyrus Thomas, the agricultural statistician and entomologist, then left the party for health reasons,[6] while José, the guide, joined the team. After resupplying and coordinating with the U.S. Army at Fort Ellis, the survey departed south along the Yellowstone River on July 15, 1871. For the next 45 days, the Hayden Survey would coordinate efforts with the Barlow-Heap expedition under the command of Colonel John W. Barlow, Chief Engineer for General Philip Sheridan that the U.S. Army was sending into Yellowstone at the same time.

As the survey team traveled up the Yellowstone River in what is now called Paradise Valley, they confirmed what Hayden already knew, that the trail was unsuitable for their wagons. Near Bottler's Ranch 45°19′30″N 110°47′33″W / 45.32500°N 110.79250°W / 45.32500; -110.79250 (Bottlers Ranch), the last outpost in the valley near Emigrant Gulch, the survey team set up a base camp that would be used to assist in any communications or support needed while the team was in the Yellowstone region with Fort Ellis. Abandoning their wagons at the base camp, the survey headed into Yankee Jim Canyon 45°11′43″N 110°54′05″W / 45.19528°N 110.90139°W / 45.19528; -110.90139 (Yankee Jim Canyon) late on July 20, 1871.

Yellowstone region

 
Jackson's 1871 photo of the Lower Falls of the Yellowstone
 
Map of Yellowstone from 1871 survey
 
Map of Upper Geyser Basin, 1871

On July 21, 1871 the Hayden survey entered the park region at the Gardner River proceeding up that river to what is now called Mammoth Hot Springs where they explored and camped for two days. At Mammoth, they found that two men, named J.C. McCartney and H. R. Horr, had laid claim to 320 acres (1.3 km2) and established a ranch and bath house on the Mammoth terraces near Liberty Cap. These entrepreneurs eventually established a primitive hotel at Mammoth and were not evicted from the area until many years after the park was established.[7] On July 24, 1871 the survey team departed Mammoth en route to Tower Fall. They took a route very close to today's Mammoth-Tower road passing both Undine Falls 44°56′39″N 110°38′20″W / 44.94417°N 110.63889°W / 44.94417; -110.63889 (Undine Falls) on Lava Creek and Wraith Falls 44°56′14″N 110°37′25″W / 44.93722°N 110.62361°W / 44.93722; -110.62361 (Wraith Falls) on Lupine Creek. They reached and camped at Tower Creek on July 25, 1871.

The survey team spent three days traveling around Mount Washburn and along the western edge of the Yellowstone River in Hayden Valley to reach its source at Yellowstone Lake on July 28, 1871. It was here that Lt. Gustavus C. Doane replaced Captain Tyler as commander of the military escort. En route they camped at Cascade Creek 44°43′00″N 110°29′58″W / 44.71667°N 110.49944°W / 44.71667; -110.49944 (Cascade Creek) near Yellowstone Falls where W. H. Jackson took the first known photographs of the falls. On July 28, 1871 some members of the Hayden party assembled a small boat from components they packed in from Fort Ellis and carved oars from nearby trees. The boat, Annie, was the first known boat to sail on the waters of Yellowstone Lake. Annie was used by several members of the party to explore the islands and take soundings of the lake. The first trip was made by James Stevenson and Henry Elliot to an island about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) offshore. Hayden named the island Stevenson Island[8] 44°30′55″N 110°23′07″W / 44.51528°N 110.38528°W / 44.51528; -110.38528 (Stevenson Island).

On July 31, 1871 Hayden and some members of his survey team left Yellowstone Lake (others stayed at the lake to tend the boat and supplies) and ventured back into the Hayden Valley where at the Crater Hills Geyser group they proceeded due west en route the geyser basins of the Madison River drainage. They eventually reached the headwaters of Nez Percé Creek 44°34′40″N 110°37′13″W / 44.57778°N 110.62028°W / 44.57778; -110.62028 (Nez Perce Creek), traveling down the creek until they camped about 6 miles (9.7 km) from the Firehole River. The party spent several days in the Lower, Midway and Upper Geyser basins finally departing on August 6, 1871.

The survey followed the Firehole River upstream to Madison Lake 44°20′55″N 110°51′58″W / 44.34861°N 110.86611°W / 44.34861; -110.86611 (Madison Lake) and then over the divide to Shoshone Lake eventually camping near Lost Lake about 6 miles (9.7 km) from the West Thumb area of Yellowstone Lake. On August 7, 1871 they camped and explored at West Thumb for two days. As some of the military escort were to travel back to Fort Ellis, the survey team took the opportunity to send back correspondence and a large amount of specimens collected to the Base Camp at Bottler's Ranch. In that correspondence was Hayden's Report No. 7 to Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, Dr. Spencer Baird, a bit of which is excerpted below:

Yellowstone Lake, WY August 8th, 1871 - Dear Professor Baird, Your letters of June 6th and July 3rd were brought us from Fort Ellis by Lt. Doane who has just arrived to take command of our escort and accompany my party the remainder of the season. ... We arrived at the banks of the Yellow Stone Lake [sic] July 26th [actually July 28] and pitched our camp near the point where the river leaves the Lake. Hence we brought the first pair of wheels that ever came to the Lake with our Odometer. We launched the first Boat on the Lake, 4.5 feet wide and 11 feet long, with sails and oars. ... A chart of this soundings will be made. Points have been located with a prismatic compass all around the Lake. A man stands on the shore with a compass and takes a bearing to the man in the Boat as he drops the lead, giving a signal at the time. Then a man in the Boat takes a bearing to the fixed point on the shore where the first man is located and thus the soundings will be located on the chart. Henry Elliot and Mr. Carrington have just left in our little boat, the Annie. [They] will make a systematic sketch of the shore with all its indentations, with the banks down, indeed, making a complete topographical as well as pictorial sketch of the shores as seen from the water, for a circuit--of at least 130 miles. ... One of the islands has been explored. We have called it Stevenson's Island as he was undoubtedly the first human that ever set foot upon it. ... We found everything in the Geyser region even more wonderful than it has been represented. ... I send this back to you by James [Stevenson] who returns to our permanent camp for supplies. ... We hope to reach Fort Ellis about the 1st or 5th of September. Schönborn does splendid Topographical work. Write at once. Yours Truly, F. V. Hayden, I will send you some Photographs soon.[9]

Between August 9 and August 19, 1871 the survey party traveled around the southern and eastern sides of Yellowstone Lake, crossing the Continental Divide twice and exploring the headwaters of the Yellowstone River. On August 19 they arrived at the northeast corner of the lake at Steamboat Point 44°31′54″N 110°17′34″W / 44.53167°N 110.29278°W / 44.53167; -110.29278 (Steamboat Point) (named by Hayden for steam jets nearby) near Turbid Lake where they camped for a few days in preparation for their return to the Yellowstone River via the East Fork (Lamar River). While camped at Steamboat Point, the party experienced two sizable earthquakes, one that Peale described as:

This morning [August 20] about 1 o'clock we had quite an earthquake. The first schock [sic] lasted about 20 seconds and was followed by five or six shorter ones. Duncan, who was on guard, says that the trees were shaken and that the horses that were lying on the ground sprang to their feet ... We had three shocks during the morning.[10]

On August 23, 1871 after dismantling and caching Annie, the party moved northeast away from Yellowstone Lake until they encountered Pelican Creek. They followed the creek northeast until they reached the divide at Mirror Lake 44°44′05″N 110°09′51″W / 44.73472°N 110.16417°W / 44.73472; -110.16417 (Mirror Lake) where they camped. The next morning the continued northeast until encountering the headwaters of the East Fork of the Yellowstone River Lamar River. Following the river downstream they camped just short of Soda Butte Creek. In the morning, on August 25, 1871 they entered the upper Lamar Valley and traveled on good trails northwest through the valley all the way to the Yellowstone River at Baronette Bridge 44°55′45″N 110°24′03″W / 44.92917°N 110.40083°W / 44.92917; -110.40083 (Baronette Bridge). In October 1870, John C. Baronett, a Helena prospector, helped rescue Truman C. Everts after he had become lost during the Washburn Expedition of 1870. After rescuing Everts, Baronett returned to Yellowstone and constructed a pack train bridge across the Yellowstone just above the mouth of the Lamar River. This was the first bridge across the Yellowstone. In 1878, during a later survey, Hayden named a nearby peak 44°58′31″N 110°05′19″W / 44.97528°N 110.08861°W / 44.97528; -110.08861 (Baronett Peak) in honor of John Baronett.[11] By the evening of August 26, 1871 most of the survey party had left the park region and was camped just north of Gardiner on the Yellowstone River. The next day, most would rendezvous at Bottler's Ranch. After reaching Bottler's, Dr. Hayden posted his report No. 8, August 28, 1871 to Spencer Baird (excerpted):

Dear Professor Baird, We have completed our survey of the Upper Yellow Stone [sic]. Our success has been complete. Our map is now complete of every stream emptying into the Lake or River above this point. Henry Elliot and young Carrington returned in seven days with a wonderful sketch of the Lake ... Henry Elliot has sketched all the Craters, the Geysers in motion, the Mud Springs, etc. We have a splendid lot of specimens also. We have about 400 negatives ... The Lake has been well photographed. ... Huse does not amount to much. I shall drop him at Chicago and that will end him so far as I am concerned. I intend to have a nice little fellow. Dr. Peale, of Philadelphia, spend the winter at Washington arranging our collections ... He is, I think, a young man of the right stamp. ... Henry Elliot is the biggest kind of Trump. He has done some great things on this trip. ... Yours Truly, F.V. Hayden

The return to Fort Bridger

 
Thomas Moran, a guest artist on the expedition, painted The Devil's Den on Cascade Creek.

After leaving Bottler's Ranch, the party took two days to arrive at Fort Ellis where they spent six days recuperating, resupplying and preparing correspondence and specimens for shipment. Three members of the party—Huse, Dixon and Adams departed for California. During this stay, Hayden had the opportunity to respond to a letter from George Allen, his former professor who had to leave the survey before it entered the Yellowstone region:

Fort Ellis, September 2nd, 1871, My Dear Professor Allen, We have just returned having completed our work to our entire satisfaction. We have had an uninterrupted series of successes, without a single pullback. Not an accident has happened to any member of our party-we made a most admirable survey of the Yellow Stone Basin [sic], the Lake, all the Hot Springs. Mr. Jackson made the most abundant pictures. Mr. Moran was filled with enthusiasm and has returned to devote himself to the painting of pictures of the Yellow Stone [sic] region. ... I am sorry that you were not able to see the wonderful things in the Yellow Stone [sic] but when reports come before the world, you will get a pretty clear conception of them. All my party are well and speak of you with affection. Yours most sincerely, F.V. Hayden

On September 5, 1871 the remaining members of the Hayden party, less their military escort departed Fort Ellis en route to Three Forks, Montana, and the Jefferson River valley. They followed the Jefferson up to the Beaverhead River where they camped at Beaverhead Rock 45°23′11″N 112°27′35″W / 45.38639°N 112.45972°W / 45.38639; -112.45972 (Beaverhead Rock) on September 9, 1871. Jackson took the first photographs of Beaverhead Rock. They continued south, eventually crossing the divide near Red Rock River. By the evening of September 14, 1871 they were camped on Medicine Lodge Creek in Idaho. They followed Medicine Lodge Creek down into the Snake River plain arriving at Fort Hall on September 18, 1871 camping where they had camped during their inbound journey on June 21, 1871. At Fort Hall, Hayden wrote Spencer Baird in his Report No. 10 (excerpted):

Fort Hall, Idaho, September 18, 1871 Dear Professor Baird, I wrote you that we left Fort Ellis the morning of September 5th. We passed down the Gallatin Valley to the three Forks, thence by the Jefferson to its very sources, exploring many of its branches. If you look at Col Raynold's map, you will see that the river was omitted. ... We return from Fort Hall by way of Soda Springs, Bear Lake by Bear River, to Evanston on the Railroad, thence to Fort Bridger where our expedition will close. All is well with us. We are moving along pleasantly without accident of interruption. We perform a good day's work every day. We have not lost a day from storms or anything else since we left Ogden in June last. Yours Truly, F. V. Hayden

By September 29, 1871 the survey party had reached Evanston, Wyoming Territory where they boarded a Union Pacific Railroad train to Fort Bridger, arriving there on October 2, 1871. At Fort Bridger, Hayden officially concluded the survey and disbanded the survey team. Hayden and Peale made their way to Salt Lake City and then back to Washington, D.C. Jackson and Charlie Turnbull at the urging of Hayden traveled to Nebraska where they photographed Pawnee Indians on the Omaha reservation.

Survey operations

Once the survey team was organized and underway, the general route and camping locations would be determined by James Stevenson, the survey manager and director and Stephan Hovey, the wagonmaster. In open country, as they found in northern Utah, the survey party traveled an average of 15 miles (24 km) per day. Routinely after several days of march and when required to rest the party, process their findings and resupply, they would camp at a favorable location for several days.

While camping and on the march, the various scientists, photographers and topographers would venture out in small teams from the main party to collect specimens, make observations and document the flora, fauna, geology and geography of the land. In this regard, Dr. Hayden was just another scientist. Additionally, the hunters would attempt to acquire enough game to sustain the party.

In camp, the scientists would process and document their findings while preparing them for shipment to the Smithsonian Institution at the next available opportunity. Botanical specimens were pressed, dried and labeled. Mineral samples were trimmed, labeled and packaged for shipment. Photographs were cataloged and described. Correspondence was prepared to scientists in the East explaining the findings and progress of the survey. When next the survey party encountered a station that could handle mail or express shipments—usually a town, stage stop or Army facility—the prepared materials and correspondence would be shipped east.

George Allen, the botanist describes a typical day in the early portion of the survey in his journal:

Thursday, June 29 [1871] - After the Camp broke up went with the Photographic corps on a hill overlooking the vale and changed the papers of the pressed plants, while Jackson took pictures ... The hills in this passway to Montana are all of igneous character; but there are other varieties of rock boulders (principally quartzites) indicating a different character to the higher mountain passes around. ... After 12 miles traveled today in which we were rapidly ascending we came to the summit of the Chain—the Divide (Monida Pass). ... At our camp the P.M. five miles from the divide, we have excellent grass and water, and it is understood that we will remain over here one day to recruit. Collected and pressed a large amount of plants. Also found in the streams a number of shells--lymneas and physas. Junction stage station is near our camp.[12]

Survey members, equipment and transport

Note: There are conflicting accounts as to who were Hayden's topographers or map makers. Existing account names Anton Schönborn and Alfred J. Smith. Another account names Henry Gannett and that "many USGS map-making methods and standards were later developed under his leadership, and the USGS Geography Program was established under his direction".[13]

Members[14][15] Equipment and transport
  • Civilian Members
    • Robert Adams - assistant botanist
    • George Allen - botanist
    • John W. Beaman - meteorologist
    • Bob Bushnell - second ambulance driver
    • E. Campbell Carrington - zoologist
    • Joe Clark - hunter
    • Chester M. Dawes - general assistant (See Henry L. Dawes.)
    • George B. Dixon - assistant to the photographer
    • J. Wilson Duncan - general assistant
    • Henry Elliott - artist
    • Ed Flint - second mule team
    • John Geiselman - first waiter
    • Dan Gibson - cook
    • F. L. Goodfellow - first ambulance driver, in charge of odometer
    • Henry Greve - second waiter
    • Ferdinand V. Hayden - Survey leader
    • Stephan D. Hovey - wagonmaster
    • Fred J. Huse - ornithologist
    • William Henry Jackson - photographer
    • José - hunter and guide
    • George E. Kelley - second ambulance driver
    • George Loucks - first mule team
    • William B. Logan - secretary[16] (See John A. Logan.)
    • Thomas Moran - guest artist
    • Clifford De V. Negley - general assistant
    • Albert C. Peale - mineralogist
    • John Raymond - first cook
    • Dick Richards - third mule team
    • Anton Schönborn - chief topographer
    • Bob Sherman - second cook
    • Alec Sibley - fourth mule team
    • Alfred J. Smith - assistant to the topographer
    • Joseph E. Smith - hunter
    • James Stevenson - manager and director
    • Cyrus Thomas - agricultural statistician and entomologist
    • Charles Turnbull - physician and general assistant
  • Military escort
  • Twenty-seven horses
  • Twenty-one mules
  • Five four mule wagons
  • Two two horse ambulances
  • Wet and dry bulb thermometers
  • Aneriod barometers
  • Siphon (mercury) barometers
  • Sextants
  • Prismatic compasses
  • Odometers
  • Clinometers
  • Tents and stoves

Period accounts by members of the expedition

  • Hayden, F. V. (1872). Preliminary Report of the United States Geological Survey of Montana and Portions of Adjacent Territories being a Fifth Annual Report of Progress. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Interior.
  • Peale, Albert C. "The Yellowstone (various subtitles)". Philadelphia Press (15 June 1871, June 29, July 14, July 29, August 8, August 29, October 19, October 25).
  • Hayden, F.V. (February 1872). "More about the Yellowstone". Scribner's Monthly. III (4): 388–396.

Expedition's influence on creation of a National Park

The most important product of the expedition, in addition to the sketches and paintings by Thomas Moran and the photographs by William Jackson, was Hayden's lengthy report detailing the findings of his party. Hayden, working with Nathaniel Langford and Jay Cooke was so desirous of preserving the Yellowstone region that he even included drawings and descriptions of thermal features from Langford's 1871 articles in Scribners. Hayden presented this report, the photos, sketches, and paintings to Senators, Congressmen, his superiors in the Department of the Interior, and nearly everyone else who could possibly influence the founding of a park. Most importantly, his political connections with Congressman Henry L. Dawes of Massachusetts paid dividends. Dawes had supported financing of the expedition, his son Chester Dawes was a member of the survey team, and Annie, the first boat on Yellowstone Lake, was purportedly named after his daughter, Anna Dawes. Hayden also published articles in magazines with national circulation and spent much personal time and effort trying to convince Congress to establish the park.

On December 18, 1871, a bill was introduced simultaneously in the Senate, by Senator S.C. Pomeroy of Kansas, and in the House of Representatives, by Congressman William H. Clagett of the Montana Territory, for the establishment of a park at the headwaters of the Yellowstone River. Hayden's influence on Congress is readily apparent when examining the detailed information contained in the report of the House Committee on Public Lands: "The bill now before Congress has for its objective the withdrawal from settlement, occupancy, or sale, under the laws of the United States a tract of land fifty-five by sixty-five miles, about the sources of the Yellowstone and Missouri Rivers, and dedicates and sets apart as a great national park or pleasure-ground for the benefit and enjoyment of the people."

When the bill was presented to Congress, the bill's chief supporters, ably prepared by Langford, Hayden and Jay Cooke, convinced their colleagues that the region's real value was as a park area, to be preserved in its natural state. The bill was approved by a comfortable margin in the Senate on January 30, 1872, and by the House on February 27.

On March 1, 1872, President Ulysses S. Grant signed the bill into law, establishing the Yellowstone region as a public park, memorializing the results of three years of exploration by Cook-Folsom-Peterson (1869), Washburn-Langford-Doane (1870), and Hayden (1871).

Park features named in honor of members of the 1871 expedition

Further reading

  • Hayden, F. V. (1880). The Great West: Its Attractions and Resources, Containing a Popular Description of the Marvelous Scenery, Physical Geography, Fossils and Glaciers of the Wonderful Region, And the Recent Explorations of the Yellowstone Park, "The Wonderland of America". Bloomington, IL: Charles R. Brodix.
  • Chittenden, Hiram Martin (1918). The Yellowstone Park-Historical and Descriptive. Cincinnati, Ohio: Stewart and Kidd Company Publishers. ISBN 1-4179-0456-9.
  • Bonney, Orrin H. (1970). Battle Drums and Geysers-The Life And Journals Of Lt. Gustavus Cheyney Doane, Soldier And Explorer Of The Yellowstone And Snake River Regions. Chicago: Swallow Press.
  • Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden and the Founding of the Yellowstone National Park. Washington, D.C: United States Department of the Interior Geological Survey, U.S. Government Printing Office. 1973.
  • Haines, Aubrey L. (1977). The Yellowstone Story-A History of Our First National Park. Yellowstone National Park, WY: Yellowstone Library and Museum Association. ISBN 0-585-02501-0.
  • Chambers, Frank, ed. (1988). Jackson, William Henry. Hayden and His Men: Being a Selection of 108 Photographs by William Henry Jackson of the United States Geological and Geographical Survey of the Territories for the years 1870-1878. Francis Paul Geoscience Literature.
  • Merrill, Marlene Deahl, ed. (1999). Yellowstone and the Great West-Journals, Letters and Images from the 1871 Hayden Expedition. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-3148-2.
  • Schullery, Paul; Whittlesey, Lee H. (2003). Myths and History in the Creation of Yellowstone National Park. Yellowstone National Park: The Yellowstone Association. ISBN 0-8032-4305-7.
  • Scott, Kim Allen (2007). Yellowstone Denied-The Life of Gustavus Cheyney Doane. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-3800-8.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Langford, Nathaniel P. (1904). "Preface to The Folsom Cook Exploration of the Upper Yellowstone, 1869 (1894)". Contributions to the Historical Society of Montana. V: 354–55.
  2. ^ Merrill, Marlene Deahl, ed. (1999). Yellowstone and the Great West-Journals, Letters and Images from the 1871 Hayden Expedition. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. pp. 5–7. ISBN 0-8032-3148-2.
  3. ^ a b c "Yellowstone National Park:
    Its Exploration and Establishment". National Park Service. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
    {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
  4. ^ "JAMES STEVENSON". Yellowstone National Park, Biographical Appendix.
  5. ^ "From the Archives". Yellowstone Science. 12 (4): 45. Fall 2004.
  6. ^ Merrill, Marlene Deahl, ed. (1999). Yellowstone and the Great West-Journals, Letters and Images from the 1871 Hayden Expedition. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. p. 115. ISBN 0-8032-3148-2.
  7. ^ Culpin, Mary Shivers (2003). For the Benefit and Enjoyment of the People: A History of Concession Development in Yellowstone National Park-1872-1966. Yellowstone National Park, WY: Yellowstone Center for Resources.
  8. ^ Haines, Aubrey L. (1996). Yellowstone Place Names-Mirrors of History. Niwot, Colorado: University Press of Colorado. pp. 91–92. ISBN 0-87081-382-X.
  9. ^ Merrill, Marlene Deahl, ed. (1999). Yellowstone and the Great West-Journals, Letters and Images from the 1871 Hayden Expedition. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. pp. 152–154. ISBN 0-8032-3148-2.
  10. ^ Merrill, Marlene Deahl, ed. (1999). Yellowstone and the Great West-Journals, Letters and Images from the 1871 Hayden Expedition. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. p. 164. ISBN 0-8032-3148-2.
  11. ^ Haines, Aubrey L. (1996). Yellowstone Place Names-Mirrors of History. Niwot, Colorado: University Press of Colorado. pp. 108–09. ISBN 0-87081-382-X.
  12. ^ Merrill, Marlene Deahl, ed. (1999). Yellowstone and the Great West-Journals, Letters and Images from the 1871 Hayden Expedition. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. pp. 91–92. ISBN 0-8032-3148-2.
  13. ^ "125 Years of Topographic Mapping". U.S. Geographical Society. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  14. ^ Merrill, Marlene Deahl, ed. (1999). Yellowstone and the Great West-Journals, Letters and Images from the 1871 Hayden Expedition. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. pp. 31–32. ISBN 0-8032-3148-2.
  15. ^ Scott, Kim Allen (2007). Yellowstone Denied-The Life of Gustavus Cheyney Doane. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. pp. 85–88. ISBN 978-0-8061-3800-8.
  16. ^ William Logan - The Legislative Response to Hayden's 1871 Expedition: A Turning Point in the Creation of National Parks
  17. ^ Chittenden, Hiram Martin (1903). The Yellowstone National Park: Historical and Descriptive. R. Clarke Company. pp. 129.
  18. ^ Merrill, Marlene Deahl, ed. (1999). "Edward Campbell Carrington (1851–1917)". Yellowstone and the Great West-Journals, Letters and Images from the 1871 Hayden Expedition. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. pp. 214–215. ISBN 0-8032-3148-2.

External links

hayden, geological, survey, 1871, explored, region, northwestern, wyoming, that, later, became, yellowstone, national, park, 1872, geologist, ferdinand, vandeveer, hayden, 1871, survey, hayden, first, first, federally, funded, geological, survey, explore, furt. The Hayden Geological Survey of 1871 explored the region of northwestern Wyoming that later became Yellowstone National Park in 1872 It was led by geologist Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden The 1871 survey was not Hayden s first but it was the first federally funded geological survey to explore and further document features in the region soon to become Yellowstone National Park and played a prominent role in convincing the U S Congress to pass the legislation creating the park In 1894 Nathaniel P Langford the first park superintendent and a member of the Washburn Langford Doane Expedition which explored the park in 1870 wrote this about the Hayden expedition 1871 Hayden Survey at Mirror Lake en route to East Fork of the Yellowstone River August 24 1871 W H Jackson photo We trace the creation of the park from the Folsom Cook expedition of 1869 to the Washburn expedition of 1870 and thence to the Hayden expedition U S Geological Survey of 1871 Not to one of these expeditions more than to another do we owe the legislation which set apart this pleasuring ground for the benefit and enjoyment of the people Nathaniel P Langford 1 Contents 1 Origins 2 Survey route 2 1 Yellowstone region 2 2 The return to Fort Bridger 3 Survey operations 4 Survey members equipment and transport 5 Period accounts by members of the expedition 6 Expedition s influence on creation of a National Park 6 1 Park features named in honor of members of the 1871 expedition 7 Further reading 8 See also 9 Notes 10 External linksOrigins EditThe 1871 Hayden survey had its roots in the Pacific Railroad Survey bill passed by Congress in 1853 to find the best routes for railroads from the Mississippi to the Pacific coast The bill spawned an era of federally funded Great Surveys undertaken by the Department of the Interior after the Civil War that brought together explorers engineers scientists and topographers in a common effort to chart the western U S Hayden along with John Wesley Powell Clarence King and George Wheeler were the leaders of these great surveys 2 In March 1871 a sum of 40 000 was appropriated by Congress to finance Hayden s fifth survey to explore mostly the territories of Idaho and Montana Hayden was very familiar with Jay Cooke s desire to promote the Yellowstone region for the Northern Pacific Railroad and had attended Nathaniel P Langford s January 1871 lecture in Washington D C on the Washburn Langford Doane Expedition to Yellowstone of the previous year 3 The 40 000 that was granted for Hayden s expedition was not available until July 1 the beginning of the fiscal year however the determined Hayden was still able to organize and equip his expedition with the help of the US Army Fort Bridger and the railroads After the passage of the Sundry Civil bill Hayden immediately applied to the Secretary of War for permission to draw on equipment stores and transportation at frontier army posts This was authorized together with a small escort when deemed necessary and the public service will permit Likewise the Union Pacific and Central Pacific Railroads agreed to carry Hayden s men and equipment without cost 3 Hayden had an experienced assistant James Stevenson In 1866 Stevenson accompanied Hayden into the badlands of Dakota Territory in a search for minerals and fossils and from that time on he was Hayden s assistant in every venture until the Hayden Survey was merged with those of King and Powell to form the U S Geological Survey in 1879 4 The two were now able to outfit and equip members of Hayden s survey at Fort D A Russell in Wyoming and transport the equipment subsistence wagons and animals he would need by rail to Ogden Utah where a base camp had been set up in May on an old lake terrace a mile east of the city During the weeks leading up to the expedition the scientists and other men were to make up the party that would venture into the Yellowstone region 3 In the spring of 1871 Hayden selected the members of the survey team 32 in all from among friends and colleagues seven previous survey participants and a few political patrons Included in the party was William Henry Jackson his photographer from his 1870 survey and Thomas Moran a guest artist arranged by Jay Cooke 5 Two of the members the young mineralogist Albert Peale and the botanist George Allen were respectively a student of Hayden s at the University of Pennsylvania and Hayden s Natural History professor at Oberlin College Both Allen and Peale kept private journals of the expedition which when discovered in later years have brought great insight to the daily operations of the survey team Survey route EditMap all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KMLThe survey officially began on June 8 1871 when it departed Ogden Utah 41 13 40 N 111 57 40 W 41 227744 N 111 961193 W 41 227744 111 961193 Ogden Utah although many survey members were already making observations and collecting specimens while the team was assembling in Salt Lake City and then Ogden The party traveled north reaching Taylor s Bridge 43 29 30 N 112 01 57 W 43 491775 N 112 032509 W 43 491775 112 032509 Taylor s Bridge now Idaho Falls on the Snake River on June 25 1871 On June 30 1871 the survey party had reached into Montana camping just over the Continental Divide near Monida Pass 44 33 31 N 112 18 20 W 44 55861 N 112 30556 W 44 55861 112 30556 Monida Pass Hayden and his survey party reached Virginia City Montana 45 17 39 N 111 56 28 W 45 294107 N 111 94123 W 45 294107 111 94123 Virginia City Montana on July 4 1871 and Fort Ellis near Bozeman Montana on July 10 1871 By this time Thomas Moran the guest artist had joined the survey At Fort Ellis both George Allen the botanist and Cyrus Thomas the agricultural statistician and entomologist then left the party for health reasons 6 while Jose the guide joined the team After resupplying and coordinating with the U S Army at Fort Ellis the survey departed south along the Yellowstone River on July 15 1871 For the next 45 days the Hayden Survey would coordinate efforts with the Barlow Heap expedition under the command of Colonel John W Barlow Chief Engineer for General Philip Sheridan that the U S Army was sending into Yellowstone at the same time As the survey team traveled up the Yellowstone River in what is now called Paradise Valley they confirmed what Hayden already knew that the trail was unsuitable for their wagons Near Bottler s Ranch 45 19 30 N 110 47 33 W 45 32500 N 110 79250 W 45 32500 110 79250 Bottlers Ranch the last outpost in the valley near Emigrant Gulch the survey team set up a base camp that would be used to assist in any communications or support needed while the team was in the Yellowstone region with Fort Ellis Abandoning their wagons at the base camp the survey headed into Yankee Jim Canyon 45 11 43 N 110 54 05 W 45 19528 N 110 90139 W 45 19528 110 90139 Yankee Jim Canyon late on July 20 1871 Yellowstone region Edit Jackson s 1871 photo of the Lower Falls of the Yellowstone Map of Yellowstone from 1871 survey Map of Upper Geyser Basin 1871 On July 21 1871 the Hayden survey entered the park region at the Gardner River proceeding up that river to what is now called Mammoth Hot Springs where they explored and camped for two days At Mammoth they found that two men named J C McCartney and H R Horr had laid claim to 320 acres 1 3 km2 and established a ranch and bath house on the Mammoth terraces near Liberty Cap These entrepreneurs eventually established a primitive hotel at Mammoth and were not evicted from the area until many years after the park was established 7 On July 24 1871 the survey team departed Mammoth en route to Tower Fall They took a route very close to today s Mammoth Tower road passing both Undine Falls 44 56 39 N 110 38 20 W 44 94417 N 110 63889 W 44 94417 110 63889 Undine Falls on Lava Creek and Wraith Falls 44 56 14 N 110 37 25 W 44 93722 N 110 62361 W 44 93722 110 62361 Wraith Falls on Lupine Creek They reached and camped at Tower Creek on July 25 1871 The survey team spent three days traveling around Mount Washburn and along the western edge of the Yellowstone River in Hayden Valley to reach its source at Yellowstone Lake on July 28 1871 It was here that Lt Gustavus C Doane replaced Captain Tyler as commander of the military escort En route they camped at Cascade Creek 44 43 00 N 110 29 58 W 44 71667 N 110 49944 W 44 71667 110 49944 Cascade Creek near Yellowstone Falls where W H Jackson took the first known photographs of the falls On July 28 1871 some members of the Hayden party assembled a small boat from components they packed in from Fort Ellis and carved oars from nearby trees The boat Annie was the first known boat to sail on the waters of Yellowstone Lake Annie was used by several members of the party to explore the islands and take soundings of the lake The first trip was made by James Stevenson and Henry Elliot to an island about 1 5 miles 2 4 km offshore Hayden named the island Stevenson Island 8 44 30 55 N 110 23 07 W 44 51528 N 110 38528 W 44 51528 110 38528 Stevenson Island On July 31 1871 Hayden and some members of his survey team left Yellowstone Lake others stayed at the lake to tend the boat and supplies and ventured back into the Hayden Valley where at the Crater Hills Geyser group they proceeded due west en route the geyser basins of the Madison River drainage They eventually reached the headwaters of Nez Perce Creek 44 34 40 N 110 37 13 W 44 57778 N 110 62028 W 44 57778 110 62028 Nez Perce Creek traveling down the creek until they camped about 6 miles 9 7 km from the Firehole River The party spent several days in the Lower Midway and Upper Geyser basins finally departing on August 6 1871 The survey followed the Firehole River upstream to Madison Lake 44 20 55 N 110 51 58 W 44 34861 N 110 86611 W 44 34861 110 86611 Madison Lake and then over the divide to Shoshone Lake eventually camping near Lost Lake about 6 miles 9 7 km from the West Thumb area of Yellowstone Lake On August 7 1871 they camped and explored at West Thumb for two days As some of the military escort were to travel back to Fort Ellis the survey team took the opportunity to send back correspondence and a large amount of specimens collected to the Base Camp at Bottler s Ranch In that correspondence was Hayden s Report No 7 to Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution Dr Spencer Baird a bit of which is excerpted below Yellowstone Lake WY August 8th 1871 Dear Professor Baird Your letters of June 6th and July 3rd were brought us from Fort Ellis by Lt Doane who has just arrived to take command of our escort and accompany my party the remainder of the season We arrived at the banks of the Yellow Stone Lake sic July 26th actually July 28 and pitched our camp near the point where the river leaves the Lake Hence we brought the first pair of wheels that ever came to the Lake with our Odometer We launched the first Boat on the Lake 4 5 feet wide and 11 feet long with sails and oars A chart of this soundings will be made Points have been located with a prismatic compass all around the Lake A man stands on the shore with a compass and takes a bearing to the man in the Boat as he drops the lead giving a signal at the time Then a man in the Boat takes a bearing to the fixed point on the shore where the first man is located and thus the soundings will be located on the chart Henry Elliot and Mr Carrington have just left in our little boat the Annie They will make a systematic sketch of the shore with all its indentations with the banks down indeed making a complete topographical as well as pictorial sketch of the shores as seen from the water for a circuit of at least 130 miles One of the islands has been explored We have called it Stevenson s Island as he was undoubtedly the first human that ever set foot upon it We found everything in the Geyser region even more wonderful than it has been represented I send this back to you by James Stevenson who returns to our permanent camp for supplies We hope to reach Fort Ellis about the 1st or 5th of September Schonborn does splendid Topographical work Write at once Yours Truly F V Hayden I will send you some Photographs soon 9 Between August 9 and August 19 1871 the survey party traveled around the southern and eastern sides of Yellowstone Lake crossing the Continental Divide twice and exploring the headwaters of the Yellowstone River On August 19 they arrived at the northeast corner of the lake at Steamboat Point 44 31 54 N 110 17 34 W 44 53167 N 110 29278 W 44 53167 110 29278 Steamboat Point named by Hayden for steam jets nearby near Turbid Lake where they camped for a few days in preparation for their return to the Yellowstone River via the East Fork Lamar River While camped at Steamboat Point the party experienced two sizable earthquakes one that Peale described as This morning August 20 about 1 o clock we had quite an earthquake The first schock sic lasted about 20 seconds and was followed by five or six shorter ones Duncan who was on guard says that the trees were shaken and that the horses that were lying on the ground sprang to their feet We had three shocks during the morning 10 On August 23 1871 after dismantling and caching Annie the party moved northeast away from Yellowstone Lake until they encountered Pelican Creek They followed the creek northeast until they reached the divide at Mirror Lake 44 44 05 N 110 09 51 W 44 73472 N 110 16417 W 44 73472 110 16417 Mirror Lake where they camped The next morning the continued northeast until encountering the headwaters of the East Fork of the Yellowstone River Lamar River Following the river downstream they camped just short of Soda Butte Creek In the morning on August 25 1871 they entered the upper Lamar Valley and traveled on good trails northwest through the valley all the way to the Yellowstone River at Baronette Bridge 44 55 45 N 110 24 03 W 44 92917 N 110 40083 W 44 92917 110 40083 Baronette Bridge In October 1870 John C Baronett a Helena prospector helped rescue Truman C Everts after he had become lost during the Washburn Expedition of 1870 After rescuing Everts Baronett returned to Yellowstone and constructed a pack train bridge across the Yellowstone just above the mouth of the Lamar River This was the first bridge across the Yellowstone In 1878 during a later survey Hayden named a nearby peak 44 58 31 N 110 05 19 W 44 97528 N 110 08861 W 44 97528 110 08861 Baronett Peak in honor of John Baronett 11 By the evening of August 26 1871 most of the survey party had left the park region and was camped just north of Gardiner on the Yellowstone River The next day most would rendezvous at Bottler s Ranch After reaching Bottler s Dr Hayden posted his report No 8 August 28 1871 to Spencer Baird excerpted Dear Professor Baird We have completed our survey of the Upper Yellow Stone sic Our success has been complete Our map is now complete of every stream emptying into the Lake or River above this point Henry Elliot and young Carrington returned in seven days with a wonderful sketch of the Lake Henry Elliot has sketched all the Craters the Geysers in motion the Mud Springs etc We have a splendid lot of specimens also We have about 400 negatives The Lake has been well photographed Huse does not amount to much I shall drop him at Chicago and that will end him so far as I am concerned I intend to have a nice little fellow Dr Peale of Philadelphia spend the winter at Washington arranging our collections He is I think a young man of the right stamp Henry Elliot is the biggest kind of Trump He has done some great things on this trip Yours Truly F V Hayden The return to Fort Bridger Edit Thomas Moran a guest artist on the expedition painted The Devil s Den on Cascade Creek After leaving Bottler s Ranch the party took two days to arrive at Fort Ellis where they spent six days recuperating resupplying and preparing correspondence and specimens for shipment Three members of the party Huse Dixon and Adams departed for California During this stay Hayden had the opportunity to respond to a letter from George Allen his former professor who had to leave the survey before it entered the Yellowstone region Fort Ellis September 2nd 1871 My Dear Professor Allen We have just returned having completed our work to our entire satisfaction We have had an uninterrupted series of successes without a single pullback Not an accident has happened to any member of our party we made a most admirable survey of the Yellow Stone Basin sic the Lake all the Hot Springs Mr Jackson made the most abundant pictures Mr Moran was filled with enthusiasm and has returned to devote himself to the painting of pictures of the Yellow Stone sic region I am sorry that you were not able to see the wonderful things in the Yellow Stone sic but when reports come before the world you will get a pretty clear conception of them All my party are well and speak of you with affection Yours most sincerely F V Hayden On September 5 1871 the remaining members of the Hayden party less their military escort departed Fort Ellis en route to Three Forks Montana and the Jefferson River valley They followed the Jefferson up to the Beaverhead River where they camped at Beaverhead Rock 45 23 11 N 112 27 35 W 45 38639 N 112 45972 W 45 38639 112 45972 Beaverhead Rock on September 9 1871 Jackson took the first photographs of Beaverhead Rock They continued south eventually crossing the divide near Red Rock River By the evening of September 14 1871 they were camped on Medicine Lodge Creek in Idaho They followed Medicine Lodge Creek down into the Snake River plain arriving at Fort Hall on September 18 1871 camping where they had camped during their inbound journey on June 21 1871 At Fort Hall Hayden wrote Spencer Baird in his Report No 10 excerpted Fort Hall Idaho September 18 1871 Dear Professor Baird I wrote you that we left Fort Ellis the morning of September 5th We passed down the Gallatin Valley to the three Forks thence by the Jefferson to its very sources exploring many of its branches If you look at Col Raynold s map you will see that the river was omitted We return from Fort Hall by way of Soda Springs Bear Lake by Bear River to Evanston on the Railroad thence to Fort Bridger where our expedition will close All is well with us We are moving along pleasantly without accident of interruption We perform a good day s work every day We have not lost a day from storms or anything else since we left Ogden in June last Yours Truly F V Hayden By September 29 1871 the survey party had reached Evanston Wyoming Territory where they boarded a Union Pacific Railroad train to Fort Bridger arriving there on October 2 1871 At Fort Bridger Hayden officially concluded the survey and disbanded the survey team Hayden and Peale made their way to Salt Lake City and then back to Washington D C Jackson and Charlie Turnbull at the urging of Hayden traveled to Nebraska where they photographed Pawnee Indians on the Omaha reservation Survey operations EditOnce the survey team was organized and underway the general route and camping locations would be determined by James Stevenson the survey manager and director and Stephan Hovey the wagonmaster In open country as they found in northern Utah the survey party traveled an average of 15 miles 24 km per day Routinely after several days of march and when required to rest the party process their findings and resupply they would camp at a favorable location for several days While camping and on the march the various scientists photographers and topographers would venture out in small teams from the main party to collect specimens make observations and document the flora fauna geology and geography of the land In this regard Dr Hayden was just another scientist Additionally the hunters would attempt to acquire enough game to sustain the party In camp the scientists would process and document their findings while preparing them for shipment to the Smithsonian Institution at the next available opportunity Botanical specimens were pressed dried and labeled Mineral samples were trimmed labeled and packaged for shipment Photographs were cataloged and described Correspondence was prepared to scientists in the East explaining the findings and progress of the survey When next the survey party encountered a station that could handle mail or express shipments usually a town stage stop or Army facility the prepared materials and correspondence would be shipped east George Allen the botanist describes a typical day in the early portion of the survey in his journal Thursday June 29 1871 After the Camp broke up went with the Photographic corps on a hill overlooking the vale and changed the papers of the pressed plants while Jackson took pictures The hills in this passway to Montana are all of igneous character but there are other varieties of rock boulders principally quartzites indicating a different character to the higher mountain passes around After 12 miles traveled today in which we were rapidly ascending we came to the summit of the Chain the Divide Monida Pass At our camp the P M five miles from the divide we have excellent grass and water and it is understood that we will remain over here one day to recruit Collected and pressed a large amount of plants Also found in the streams a number of shells lymneas and physas Junction stage station is near our camp 12 Survey members equipment and transport EditNote There are conflicting accounts as to who were Hayden s topographers or map makers Existing account names Anton Schonborn and Alfred J Smith Another account names Henry Gannett and that many USGS map making methods and standards were later developed under his leadership and the USGS Geography Program was established under his direction 13 Members 14 15 Equipment and transportCivilian Members Robert Adams assistant botanist George Allen botanist John W Beaman meteorologist Bob Bushnell second ambulance driver E Campbell Carrington zoologist Joe Clark hunter Chester M Dawes general assistant See Henry L Dawes George B Dixon assistant to the photographer J Wilson Duncan general assistant Henry Elliott artist Ed Flint second mule team John Geiselman first waiter Dan Gibson cook F L Goodfellow first ambulance driver in charge of odometer Henry Greve second waiter Ferdinand V Hayden Survey leader Stephan D Hovey wagonmaster Fred J Huse ornithologist William Henry Jackson photographer Jose hunter and guide George E Kelley second ambulance driver George Loucks first mule team William B Logan secretary 16 See John A Logan Thomas Moran guest artist Clifford De V Negley general assistant Albert C Peale mineralogist John Raymond first cook Dick Richards third mule team Anton Schonborn chief topographer Bob Sherman second cook Alec Sibley fourth mule team Alfred J Smith assistant to the topographer Joseph E Smith hunter James Stevenson manager and director Cyrus Thomas agricultural statistician and entomologist Charles Turnbull physician and general assistant Military escort Captain George L Tyler escort leader 2nd Cavalry Fort Ellis Montana Territory Lt Gustavus C Doane Guide U S Army 2nd Cavalry Fort Ellis Montana Territory Twenty seven horses Twenty one mules Five four mule wagons Two two horse ambulances Wet and dry bulb thermometers Aneriod barometers Siphon mercury barometers Sextants Prismatic compasses Odometers Clinometers Tents and stovesMembers of the survey F V Hayden 1870 Dr Hayden at work 1870 survey W H Jackson painting en route at Yellowstone Lake Lt Gustavus C Doane 1875 Thomas Moran 1883 William H Jackson 1872 Henry Elliot 1870 Jose and Joe Clark Hunters 1871 Jackson Peale Dixon and Turnbull in camp at Fort Hall September 19 1871 Carrington Negley and Logan in camp during survey Alfred Smith Assistant to the topographer 1871 Fred Huse Ornithologist Bottler s Ranch July 17 1871 Albert Peale and Clifford Negley on far right The Annie with Stevenson and Chester Dawes July 28 1871 George Allen circa 1859 1870 survey Beaman Elliot and Thomas are on the right Cyrus Thomas 1870 survey Clifford Negley in the park during 1872 survey E Campbell Carrington Zoologist 1874 survey George B Dixon Photographer assistant 1871 James Stevenson Survey manager c 1871 Dr Charles Turnbull Physician c 1871 Steve Hovey Wagonmaster c 1871Period accounts by members of the expedition EditHayden F V 1872 Preliminary Report of the United States Geological Survey of Montana and Portions of Adjacent Territories being a Fifth Annual Report of Progress Washington D C U S Department of Interior Peale Albert C The Yellowstone various subtitles Philadelphia Press 15 June 1871 June 29 July 14 July 29 August 8 August 29 October 19 October 25 Hayden F V February 1872 More about the Yellowstone Scribner s Monthly III 4 388 396 Expedition s influence on creation of a National Park EditThe most important product of the expedition in addition to the sketches and paintings by Thomas Moran and the photographs by William Jackson was Hayden s lengthy report detailing the findings of his party Hayden working with Nathaniel Langford and Jay Cooke was so desirous of preserving the Yellowstone region that he even included drawings and descriptions of thermal features from Langford s 1871 articles in Scribners Hayden presented this report the photos sketches and paintings to Senators Congressmen his superiors in the Department of the Interior and nearly everyone else who could possibly influence the founding of a park Most importantly his political connections with Congressman Henry L Dawes of Massachusetts paid dividends Dawes had supported financing of the expedition his son Chester Dawes was a member of the survey team and Annie the first boat on Yellowstone Lake was purportedly named after his daughter Anna Dawes Hayden also published articles in magazines with national circulation and spent much personal time and effort trying to convince Congress to establish the park On December 18 1871 a bill was introduced simultaneously in the Senate by Senator S C Pomeroy of Kansas and in the House of Representatives by Congressman William H Clagett of the Montana Territory for the establishment of a park at the headwaters of the Yellowstone River Hayden s influence on Congress is readily apparent when examining the detailed information contained in the report of the House Committee on Public Lands The bill now before Congress has for its objective the withdrawal from settlement occupancy or sale under the laws of the United States a tract of land fifty five by sixty five miles about the sources of the Yellowstone and Missouri Rivers and dedicates and sets apart as a great national park or pleasure ground for the benefit and enjoyment of the people When the bill was presented to Congress the bill s chief supporters ably prepared by Langford Hayden and Jay Cooke convinced their colleagues that the region s real value was as a park area to be preserved in its natural state The bill was approved by a comfortable margin in the Senate on January 30 1872 and by the House on February 27 On March 1 1872 President Ulysses S Grant signed the bill into law establishing the Yellowstone region as a public park memorializing the results of three years of exploration by Cook Folsom Peterson 1869 Washburn Langford Doane 1870 and Hayden 1871 Park features named in honor of members of the 1871 expedition Edit Carrington Island named for E Campbell Carrington 17 18 Mount Doane named for Lt Gustavus C Doane Frank Island named for the brother of Henry Elliot Frank Elliot Hayden Valley named for Ferdinand V Hayden Moran Point named for Thomas Moran Mount Jackson named for William Henry Jackson Peale Island named for Albert C Peale Mount Stevenson named for James Stevenson Stevenson Island named for James StevensonFurther reading EditHayden F V 1880 The Great West Its Attractions and Resources Containing a Popular Description of the Marvelous Scenery Physical Geography Fossils and Glaciers of the Wonderful Region And the Recent Explorations of the Yellowstone Park The Wonderland of America Bloomington IL Charles R Brodix Chittenden Hiram Martin 1918 The Yellowstone Park Historical and Descriptive Cincinnati Ohio Stewart and Kidd Company Publishers ISBN 1 4179 0456 9 Bonney Orrin H 1970 Battle Drums and Geysers The Life And Journals Of Lt Gustavus Cheyney Doane Soldier And Explorer Of The Yellowstone And Snake River Regions Chicago Swallow Press Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden and the Founding of the Yellowstone National Park Washington D C United States Department of the Interior Geological Survey U S Government Printing Office 1973 Haines Aubrey L 1977 The Yellowstone Story A History of Our First National Park Yellowstone National Park WY Yellowstone Library and Museum Association ISBN 0 585 02501 0 Chambers Frank ed 1988 Jackson William Henry Hayden and His Men Being a Selection of 108 Photographs by William Henry Jackson of the United States Geological and Geographical Survey of the Territories for the years 1870 1878 Francis Paul Geoscience Literature Merrill Marlene Deahl ed 1999 Yellowstone and the Great West Journals Letters and Images from the 1871 Hayden Expedition Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press ISBN 0 8032 3148 2 Schullery Paul Whittlesey Lee H 2003 Myths and History in the Creation of Yellowstone National Park Yellowstone National Park The Yellowstone Association ISBN 0 8032 4305 7 Scott Kim Allen 2007 Yellowstone Denied The Life of Gustavus Cheyney Doane Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 3800 8 See also EditCook Folsom Peterson Expedition Washburn Langford Doane Expedition Expeditions and the protection of Yellowstone 1869 1890 United States Geological SurveyNotes Edit Langford Nathaniel P 1904 Preface to The Folsom Cook Exploration of the Upper Yellowstone 1869 1894 Contributions to the Historical Society of Montana V 354 55 Merrill Marlene Deahl ed 1999 Yellowstone and the Great West Journals Letters and Images from the 1871 Hayden Expedition Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press pp 5 7 ISBN 0 8032 3148 2 a b c Yellowstone National Park Its Exploration and Establishment National Park Service Retrieved 10 October 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code publisher code help JAMES STEVENSON Yellowstone National Park Biographical Appendix From the Archives Yellowstone Science 12 4 45 Fall 2004 Merrill Marlene Deahl ed 1999 Yellowstone and the Great West Journals Letters and Images from the 1871 Hayden Expedition Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press p 115 ISBN 0 8032 3148 2 Culpin Mary Shivers 2003 For the Benefit and Enjoyment of the People A History of Concession Development in Yellowstone National Park 1872 1966 Yellowstone National Park WY Yellowstone Center for Resources Haines Aubrey L 1996 Yellowstone Place Names Mirrors of History Niwot Colorado University Press of Colorado pp 91 92 ISBN 0 87081 382 X Merrill Marlene Deahl ed 1999 Yellowstone and the Great West Journals Letters and Images from the 1871 Hayden Expedition Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press pp 152 154 ISBN 0 8032 3148 2 Merrill Marlene Deahl ed 1999 Yellowstone and the Great West Journals Letters and Images from the 1871 Hayden Expedition Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press p 164 ISBN 0 8032 3148 2 Haines Aubrey L 1996 Yellowstone Place Names Mirrors of History Niwot Colorado University Press of Colorado pp 108 09 ISBN 0 87081 382 X Merrill Marlene Deahl ed 1999 Yellowstone and the Great West Journals Letters and Images from the 1871 Hayden Expedition Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press pp 91 92 ISBN 0 8032 3148 2 125 Years of Topographic Mapping U S Geographical Society Retrieved 10 October 2010 Merrill Marlene Deahl ed 1999 Yellowstone and the Great West Journals Letters and Images from the 1871 Hayden Expedition Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press pp 31 32 ISBN 0 8032 3148 2 Scott Kim Allen 2007 Yellowstone Denied The Life of Gustavus Cheyney Doane Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press pp 85 88 ISBN 978 0 8061 3800 8 William Logan The Legislative Response to Hayden s 1871 Expedition A Turning Point in the Creation of National Parks Chittenden Hiram Martin 1903 The Yellowstone National Park Historical and Descriptive R Clarke Company pp 129 Merrill Marlene Deahl ed 1999 Edward Campbell Carrington 1851 1917 Yellowstone and the Great West Journals Letters and Images from the 1871 Hayden Expedition Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press pp 214 215 ISBN 0 8032 3148 2 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hayden Surveys William Henry Jackson photographs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hayden Geological Survey of 1871 amp oldid 1132980043, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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