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William F. Raynolds

William Franklin Raynolds (March 17, 1820 – October 18, 1894) was an American explorer, engineer and U.S. army officer who served in the Mexican–American War and American Civil War. He is best known for leading the 1859–60 Raynolds Expedition while serving as a member of the U.S. Army Corps of Topographical Engineers.

William F. Raynolds
Birth nameWilliam Franklin Raynolds
BornMarch 17, 1820
Canton, Ohio, U.S.
DiedOctober 18, 1894 (aged 74)
Detroit, Michigan, U.S.
Allegiance United States
Service/branch United States Army
Years of service1843–1884
Rank Colonel
Brevet Brigadier General
UnitCorps of Engineers
Corps of Topographical Engineers
Battles/warsMexican–American War
American Civil War

During the 1850s and again after his participation in the Civil War, Raynolds was the head engineer on numerous lighthouse construction projects. He oversaw riverway and harbor dredging projects intended to improve accessibility and navigation for shipping. As a cartographer, Raynolds surveyed and mapped the islands and shorelines on the Great Lakes and other regions. At least six lighthouses whose construction he oversaw are still standing. Some are still in use and of these, several are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

In 1848, during the American occupation of Mexico after the Mexican–American War, Raynolds and other U.S. Army personnel were the first confirmed to have reached the summit of Pico de Orizaba, the tallest mountain in Mexico, and inadvertently set what may have been a 50-year American alpine altitude record. In 1859, Raynolds was placed in charge of the first government-sponsored expedition to venture into the upper Yellowstone region that was later to become Yellowstone National Park. Heavy winter snowpack in the Absaroka Range of Wyoming prevented the expedition from reaching the Yellowstone Plateau, forcing them to divert to the south and cross Union Pass at the northern end of the Wind River Range. After negotiating the pass the expedition entered Jackson Hole and surveyed the Teton Range, now within Grand Teton National Park.

During the Civil War, Raynolds participated in the Battle of Cross Keys during the Valley Campaign of 1862 and a year later was in charge of fortifications in the defense of the military arsenal at Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. On March 13, 1865, Raynolds was brevetted brigadier general for meritorious service during the Civil War. After the war, Lt. Col Raynolds was assigned to a myriad of positions across the Nation to include establishing the St. Louis Engineer Office of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers from 1870 to 1872. Raynolds retired from the army on March 17, 1884, with the permanent rank of colonel.

He was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society in 1867.[1]

Early life edit

William Franklin Raynolds was born on March 17, 1820, in Canton, Ohio, the fourth of six children to William Raynolds (November 2, 1789 – September 20, 1829) and Elizabeth Seabury (née Fisk; 1796 – April 13, 1853).[2] William F. Raynolds's grandfather was also named William Raynolds (1764–1814) and had been a veteran of the War of 1812, serving as a company captain from April 12, 1812, until April 13, 1813. During the War of 1812, the grandfather Raynolds rose to the rank of major while serving under Lewis Cass.[3]

William F. Raynolds entered the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, on July 1, 1839, after being appointed[a] from Ohio.[5][6] He graduated fifth out of 39 classmates in his class of 1843, which included William B. Franklin, Raynolds's friend Joseph J. Reynolds, and future president Ulysses S. Grant.[6] Raynolds married at a young age; he and his wife had no children.[5]

Military career edit

Initially appointed a brevet second lieutenant in the 5th U.S. Infantry, within a few weeks Raynolds was transferred to the U.S. Army Corps of Topographical Engineers.[7] The Topographical Engineers performed surveys and developed maps for army use until their merger with the Corps of Engineers in 1863.[8] Raynolds's first assignments from 1843 to 1844 were as an assistant topographical engineer involved in improving navigation on the Ohio River and surveying the northeastern boundary of the U.S. between 1844 and 1847.[6]

Mexican–American War edit

 
Pico de Orizaba was believed by Raynolds to be the tallest mountain in North America.

When war with Mexico seemed imminent, topographic engineers were sent to the border to assist with the army's preparations. Raynolds served in Winfield Scott's Mexican–American War campaign that marched overland to Mexico City from the Gulf of Mexico seaport at Veracruz. After the war, the American army occupied Mexico City and the surrounding region. During the occupation, Raynolds and others set out to map and explore nearby mountains. Raynolds's party is credited with being the first confirmed to climb to the summit of Pico de Orizaba (19°01′48″N 97°16′12″W / 19.03000°N 97.27000°W / 19.03000; -97.27000), which at 18,620 feet (5,680 m), is the tallest mountain in Mexico and third tallest in North America.[9][10] Over a period of several months, Raynolds and other officers from both the army and navy mapped the best approach route to Pico de Orizaba. To assist them in their climb, the party planned on taking grapnels attached to long ropes and primitive crampons in the form of shoes with projecting points to help ensure they could safely climb up cliffs and across glaciers.[11] Told by local villagers that any attempt to reach the summit would be fruitless because no one had ever done it before,[b] the Americans became even more determined to show the Mexicans it could be climbed.[11]

As the expedition left to ascend the mountain, a long pack train of nearly fifty officers, soldiers and native guides departed from the town of Orizaba in early May 1848. After several days of hiking through dense jungle, the expedition slowly gained altitude and established a base camp at 12,000 ft (3,700 m). Starting from base camp in the early morning of May 10 nearly two dozen climbers made the final push to the top of the mountain, but only Raynolds and a few others reached the summit.[11] According to mountaineer and author Leigh N. Ortenburger, this feat may have inadvertently set the American mountaineering altitude record for the next fifty years.[12] Raynolds estimated the summit of Pico de Orizaba to be 17,907 ft (5,458 m) above sea level, which was slightly greater than previous estimates but below the modern known altitude. As no higher peaks were known in North America at that time, Raynolds believed Pico de Orizaba was the tallest mountain on the continent.[11] The summit crater was covered in snow but estimated to be between 400 and 650 yards (370 and 590 m) in diameter and 300 ft (91 m) deep. The American achievement was disputed by the Mexicans until an 1851 French expedition discovered an American flag on the summit with the year 1848 carved in the flagpole.[11]

Lighthouse engineer edit

After returning from Mexico, Raynolds resumed mapping the U.S.–Canada border which he had been surveying before the war, then embarked on a project to develop water resources for the nation's growing capital of Washington, D.C. Raynolds traveled the Great Lakes for several years surveying and mapping shorelines while identifying potential lighthouse locations.[13] After promotion to first lieutenant and then captain, in 1857 he was assigned to design and supervise the construction of lighthouses along the Jersey Shore and the Delmarva Peninsula regions.[6] in the late 1850s Raynolds supervised construction of the Fenwick Island Light in Delaware and the Cape May Light in New Jersey.[14] In 1859, Raynolds was working on finishing the Jupiter Inlet Light in Jupiter, Florida, when he was reassigned to lead the first U.S. Government-sponsored expedition to explore the Yellowstone region.[15]

Raynolds Expedition edit

 
The Great Falls of the Missouri River (1860) by James D. Hutton is one of the few remaining photographs taken during the expedition. The wet-plate photographic techniques available at the time of the expedition provided only poor quality imagery.

In early 1859, Raynolds was charged with leading an expedition into the Yellowstone region of Montana and Wyoming to determine, "as far as practicable, everything relating to ... the Indians of the country, its agricultural and mineralogical resources ... the navigability of its streams, its topographical features, and the facilities or obstacles which the latter present to the construction of rail or common roads ..."[16] The expedition was carried out by a handful of technicians, including photographer and topographer James D. Hutton, artist and mapmaker Anton Schönborn, and geologist and naturalist Ferdinand V. Hayden, who led several later expeditions to the Yellowstone region.[17][18] Raynolds's second-in-command was lieutenant Henry E. Maynadier. The expedition was supported by a small infantry detachment of 30 and was federally funded with $60,000. Experienced mountain man Jim Bridger was hired to guide the expedition.[16]

The expedition started in late May 1859 at St. Louis, Missouri, then was transported by two steamboats up the Missouri River to New Fort Pierre, South Dakota.[19] In late June the expedition left New Fort Pierre and headed overland to Fort Sarpy where they encountered the Crow Indians. Raynolds said the Crow were a "small band compared to their neighbors, but are famous warriors, and, according to common report, seldom fail to hold their own with any of the tribes unless greatly outnumbered."[20] Raynolds was impressed with Chief Red Bear and, after assuring him the expedition meant only to pass through their territory and not linger, traded with the Crow for seven horses.[20]

Raynolds divided his expedition, sending a smaller detachment under Maynadier to explore the Tongue River, a major tributary of the Yellowstone River. Two of Maynadier's party, James D. Hutton and Zephyr Recontre, the expedition's Sioux interpreter, took a side trip to locate and investigate an isolated rock formation that had been seen from great distance by a previous expedition in 1857. Hutton was the first person of European descent to reach this rock formation in northeastern Wyoming, later known as Devils Tower; Raynolds never elaborated on this event, mentioning it only in passing.[18][21] By September 2, 1859, Raynolds's detachment had followed the Yellowstone River to the confluence with the Bighorn River in south-central Montana.[19] The two parties under Raynolds and Maynadier reunited on October 12, 1859, and wintered at Deer Creek Station, on the Platte River in central Wyoming.[18][22]

 
"Principal Chiefs of the Arapaho Tribe" is an engraving after a photograph taken by James Hutton during the expedition. The Arapaho interpreter Warshinun is seated at right.

The expedition recommenced its explorations in May 1860. Raynolds led a party north and west up the upstream portion of the Bighorn River, which is today called the Wind River, hoping to cross the mountains at Togwotee Pass in the Absaroka Range, a mountain pass known to expedition guide Jim Bridger. Meanwhile, Maynadier led his party back north to the Bighorn River to explore it and its associated tributary streams more thoroughly. The plan was for the two parties to reunite on June 30, 1860, at Three Forks, Montana, so they could make observations of a total solar eclipse forecast for July 18, 1860.[16][18] Hampered by towering basaltic cliffs and deep snows, Raynolds attempted for over a week to reconnoiter to the top of Togwotee Pass, but was forced south due to the June 30 deadline for reaching Three Forks. Bridger then led the party south over another pass in the northern Wind River Range that Raynolds named Union Pass, to the west of which lay Jackson Hole and the Teton Range. From there the expedition went southwest, crossing the southern Teton Range at Teton Pass and entering Pierre's Hole in present-day Idaho.[18] Though Raynolds and his party managed to get to Three Forks by the scheduled date, Maynadier's party was several days late, which prevented a detachment heading north to observe the solar eclipse.[16] The reunited expedition then headed home, traveling from Fort Benton, Montana, to Fort Union near the Montana-North Dakota border via steamboat. It then journeyed overland to Omaha, Nebraska, where the expedition members were disbanded in October 1860.[18][22]

 
Hayden's geological map from the expedition that was published in 1869

Though the Raynolds Expedition was unsuccessful in exploring the region that later became Yellowstone National Park, it was the first federally funded party to enter Jackson Hole and observe the Teton Range.[23] The expedition covered over 2,500 miles (4,000 km) and explored an area of nearly 250,000 square miles (650,000 km2).[18] In a preliminary report sent east in 1859, Raynolds stated that the once-abundant bison were being killed for their hides at such an alarming rate they might soon become extinct.[24] Raynolds's immediate participation in the Civil War, followed by a severe illness, delayed him from presenting his report on the expedition until 1868.[16] Research data and botanical specimens, as well as fossils and geological items that had been collected during the expedition, were sent to the Smithsonian Institution but were not studied in detail until after the war. Much of the artwork created by Hutton and especially Schönborn was lost, though several of Schönborn's chromolithographs appeared in Ferdinand V. Hayden's 1883 report that was submitted after later expeditions.[18]

American Civil War edit

Raynolds returned to Washington at the outbreak of the war, and was made chief topographic engineer of the Department of Virginia in July 1861. The army lacked adequate maps for military use, so Raynolds and his team of engineers began to survey and draw up maps of Virginia and the region of the western portion of that state that had remained loyal to the Union and would become the new state of West Virginia. In 1862, Raynolds was engaged with John C. Frémont's Mountain Department in chasing Stonewall Jackson up the Shenandoah Valley and participated in the Battle of Cross Keys.[6]

Raynolds spent two months recovering from illness after the Valley Campaign, then was assigned as chief engineer of Middle Department and VIII Corps in January 1863. Promoted to major in the Corps of Engineers, he found himself in charge of the defenses of vital Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, in March 1863 during Robert E. Lee's second Confederate invasion of the north during the Gettysburg Campaign.[6] On March 31, 1863, the Corps of Topographical Engineers ceased to be an independent branch of the army and was merged into the Corps of Engineers and Raynolds served in that branch of the army for the rest of his career. Officers from the two corps maintained their ranks based on the time at which they received their promotion.[25]

As the end of war approached and hostilities with the Sioux Indians loomed, Raynolds's knowledge of and experiences in the Great Lakes region became more important to the army than his command of the fortifications of Harpers Ferry. As a result, he returned to the Great Lakes as superintending engineer of surveys and lighthouses in April 1864, and saw no further combat for the rest of his career.[6] Before the war was over, on March 13, 1865, Raynolds was brevetted to brigadier general for meritorious service.[6]

Postwar career edit

 
The construction of the Cape May Lighthouse was overseen by Raynolds in 1859 and the lighthouse is still in use. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.

After the Civil War, the Corps of Engineers undertook a program of river and harbor improvements. Raynolds supervised the dredging and improvement of navigation on the Arkansas, Mississippi and Missouri Rivers. He also helped supervise several harbor dredging and construction projects, involving the harbor in Buffalo, New York, the Harbor of Refuge in New Buffalo, Michigan, Erie Harbor in Erie, Pennsylvania, and the river harbors of St. Louis, Missouri and Alton, Illinois.[6] Raynolds sited and oversaw the installation of dozens of lighthouses in the Great Lakes area, where he served as the superintending engineer from 1864 to 1870.[26] Raynolds was promoted to permanent rank of lieutenant colonel in the Corps of Engineers on March 7, 1867.[6] He then supervised lighthouse construction along the Gulf Coast and in New Jersey where he managed the construction of the Hereford Inlet Lighthouse in 1874.[27]

In 1870, work on the harbors received a boost when the Office of Western River Improvements relocated from Cincinnati, Ohio, to St. Louis with the reassignment of Lt. Col. Raynolds as officer in charge. Since the 1830s, the work of the Office of Western River Improvements had been divided between the Ohio River on one hand and Mississippi, Arkansas, Red, and Missouri rivers on the other. In practice, engineer officers in the Corps of Topographical Engineers maintained temporary offices near each project to oversee work, including one in St. Louis or Alton. After the Civil War and the reunification of the Topographical Engineers and Corps of Engineers, there were separate offices overseeing work on the Ohio River and Western Rivers, each reporting separately to the Chief of Engineers. Most of this work remained snag removal, for which the Corps had built numerous snag-removal vessels. It was only logical to relocate the office closer to the projects being managed by moving the Office of Ohio River Improvements to Cincinnati and Western River Improvements to St. Louis. This was, in essence, the first step taken from a project-based Corps office in St. Louis to what became a district office overseeing regional projects. By 1872, Raynolds was reporting from the Engineer Office in St. Louis with responsibility from the Illinois to the Ohio River rather than from the Office of Western River Improvements, which had ceased to exist.[28]

From May 5 to October 7, 1877, Raynolds led a procession of American engineers to an engineering conference in Europe.[6] Promoted to the permanent rank of colonel on January 2, 1881, Raynolds continued serving with the Corps of Engineers supporting a variety of harbor and river navigational improvements until his retirement in 1884, after a military career spanning forty years.[6] As he approached retirement, Raynolds was elected a trustee of the Presbyterian Church.[29] According to West Point classmate Joseph Reynolds, who saw him at the West Point graduates' reunion in 1893, Raynolds maintained a vigorous and healthy appearance long after his retirement, his brown hair, "then but slightly sprinkled with gray".[5] Raynolds died on October 18, 1894, in Detroit, Michigan, leaving his widow a substantial estate for the time, estimated at between US$50,000 ($1,831,200 today) and $100,000 ($3,662,400 today).[2] After providing for his widow, his will directed that after her death, the entire estate would be donated to the Presbyterian Church.[2][5] Raynolds was interred in West Lawn Cemetery in Canton, Ohio.[30]

Legacy edit

Raynolds's 1848 expedition to the summit of Pico de Orizaba in Mexico predated what is known as the Golden age of alpinism (1854–65), when many major mountain peaks in the Alps were first climbed. The effort to summit the mountain was one of the earliest deliberate attempts to climb a major mountain peak, and involved logistics, planning and use of rudimentary climbing equipment, "making it one of the more serious mountaineering expeditions undertaken to that point in history".[11] Though unable to penetrate into the heart of what later became Yellowstone National Park, the Raynolds Expedition produced maps that were used by subsequent explorers to the greater Yellowstone region.[16] Raynolds also located suitable wagon routes in the Bighorn Basin and was able to help narrow down the most appropriate routes for a future transcontinental railroad. The Raynolds Expedition further determined that few if any rivers in the region would be suitable for steamboats due to numerous rapids and steep gradients.[31] Several lighthouses whose construction was designed or supervised by Raynolds are still in use and several are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[32]

At least two geographical locations are named for William Raynolds. The mountain gap where his expedition crossed the Continental Divide between southwest Montana and northeast Idaho is named Raynolds Pass (44°42′40″N 111°28′11″W / 44.71111°N 111.46972°W / 44.71111; -111.46972)[33][34] and Raynolds Peak (43°52′15″N 110°49′30″W / 43.87083°N 110.82500°W / 43.87083; -110.82500) is an isolated peak in the Teton Range that was named after him in 1938.[12][18][35] The fossil remains of the extinct gastropod Viviparus raynoldsanus was named by Ferdinand V. Hayden in honor of Raynolds after the specimen was collected in the Powder River Basin during the expedition.[18][36]

Lt. Col. William F. Rayholds is credited with being the first Commander of the St. Louis Engineer Office (now District) with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) as it transferred from the Office of Western River Improvements out of Cincinnati.[37]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Before the American Civil War (1860–65), appointments to the United States Military Academy usually occurred after a nominee petitioned his U.S. Representative in Congress. If the Representative believed the nominee was up to the task, deserving of the opportunity and of the right character, the nominee would then be appointed to attend the academy. U.S. Representatives could make only one appointment per year.[4]
  2. ^ In 1838, French-Belgian botanist Henri Guillaume Galeotti may have climbed as high as the mountain crater but he made no claim to have reached the summit. Neither the Mexicans nor the Americans were aware of Galeotti's earlier visit.[11]

References edit

  1. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved April 23, 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Appletons' Annual Cyclopaedia and Register of Important Events. Vol. 34. D. Appleton. 1895. p. 595. ASIN B005644AE2.
  3. ^ William Henry Perrin, ed. (1881). History of Stark County: With an Outline Sketch of Ohio. Baskin & Battey. pp. 628–629.
  4. ^ Morrison, James L. (July 1998). The Best School: West Point, 1833–1866. Kent State University Press. pp. 62–63. ISBN 978-0-87338-612-8.
  5. ^ a b c d "Twenty-First Annual Reunion of the Association Graduates of the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, June 12, 1890". The Association of the Graduates of the United States Military Academy. Evening News Printing and Binding House: 43–45. 1890.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Cullum, George W.; Edward S. Holden (April 16, 2012). "1171 – William F. Raynolds". Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y.: Nos. 1001–2000. Nabu Press. pp. 154–156. ISBN 978-1-248-90378-0.
  7. ^ "The Beginnings to 1815". The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers: A Brief History. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Retrieved June 12, 2014.
  8. ^ . U S Corps of Topographical Engineers. Archived from the original on November 3, 2014. Retrieved June 12, 2014.
  9. ^ "Pico de Orizaba, Mexico". NASA Earth Observatory. NASA. February 28, 2011. Retrieved August 30, 2014.
  10. ^ White, Sidney E. (2002). "Glaciers of North America – Glaciers of México" (PDF). U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1386-J. U.S. Geological Survey. p. J384. Retrieved January 3, 2015.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Thompson, Jerry (April 2002). "Winfield Scott's Army of Occupation as Pioneer Alpinists: Epic Ascents of Popocatepetl and Citlaltepetl". The Southwestern Historical Quarterly. 105 (4). Texas State Historical Association: 574–580. JSTOR 30239309.
  12. ^ a b Ortenburger, Leigh N.; Reynold G. Jackson (1996). A Climber's Guide to the Teton Range. The Mountaineers Books. p. 374. ISBN 978-0-89886-480-9.
  13. ^ Beers, Henry P. (1942). . The Military Engineer. 34 (200–201): (Jun 1942): pp. 287–91 & (Jul 1942): pp. 348–52. Archived from the original on September 26, 2014. Retrieved January 3, 2015.
  14. ^ United States House of Representatives (1860). "Receipts and Expenditures". House Documents. 123 and 126. U.S. Government Printing Office: 183.
  15. ^ Snyder, James (Fall 2006). "Jupiter Inlet Lighthouse A Foothold on the Southeast Florida Frontier" (PDF). U.S. Lighthouse Society. Retrieved March 5, 2020.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Baldwin, Kenneth H. (2005). . Enchanted Enclosure:The Army Engineers and Yellowstone National Park. University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 978-1-4102-2180-3. Archived from the original on October 23, 2012. Retrieved July 13, 2014.
  17. ^ Harris, Ann G.; Esther Tuttle; Sherwood D. Tuttle (2003). Geology of National Parks (6th ed.). Kendall Hunt Pub Co. p. 649. ISBN 978-0-7872-9970-5.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Merrill, Daniel D. and Marlene Deahl, ed. (June 15, 2012). Up the Winds and Over the Tetons: Journal Entries and Images from the 1860 Raynolds Expedition. University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 978-0-8263-5097-8.
  19. ^ a b "Raynolds Expedition 1859–60 and Bighorn Canyon Part 1". National Park Service. Retrieved June 13, 2014.
  20. ^ a b Raynolds, William F. (1868). Report on the Exploration of the Yellowstone River. Kessinger Publishing, LLC. pp. 50–51. ISBN 978-1-4370-6624-1.
  21. ^ Mattison, Ray H. (1955). "The First Fifty Years – Early Exploration". History and Culture. National Park Service. Retrieved June 15, 2014.
  22. ^ a b Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution. Smithsonian Institution. 1906. p. 589.
  23. ^ Chittenden, Hiram M. (2005). "Chapter VII. Raynolds' Expedition". The Yellowstone National Park Historical and Descriptive. Kessinger Publishing, LLC. p. 57. ISBN 978-1-4179-0456-3.
  24. ^ "Historical Vignette 092 – Engineers Warned of Extinction of the "Noble" Buffalo". U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. 2004. Retrieved July 13, 2014.
  25. ^ . U.S. Corps of Topographical Engineers. Archived from the original on July 19, 2013. Retrieved November 22, 2014.
  26. ^ Cullum, George W. (October 27, 2009). Biographical Register of the Officers. Applewood Books. pp. 158–159. ISBN 978-1-4290-2129-6.
  27. ^ Veasey, David (May 28, 2000). Guarding New Jersey's Shore: Lighthouses and Life-Saving Stations. Arcadia Publishing. p. 40. ISBN 978-0-7385-0417-9.
  28. ^ Manders, Damon; Rentfro, Brian (September 1, 2011). "Engineers: Far From Ordinary" (PDF). The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in St. Louis. pp. 47, 49. (PDF) from the original on November 25, 2023.
  29. ^ "Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. General Assembly". Minutes of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America. Presbyterian Board of Publication. 1881. p. 776.
  30. ^ Eicher, John; Eicher, David (June 28, 2002). Civil War High Commands. Stanford University Press. p. 684. ISBN 978-0-8047-3641-1.
  31. ^ Raynolds, William Franklin (1868). Report on the Exploration of the Yellowstone River. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Government Printing Office. pp. 12–18. ISBN 978-1-4370-6624-1.
  32. ^ (PDF). New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places. State of New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. October 22, 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 28, 2016. Retrieved January 4, 2014. List includes New Hereford and Cape May lighthouses
  33. ^ "Raynolds Pass". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved July 11, 2014.
  34. ^ Works Projects Administration (August 1, 1994). The WPA Guide to 1930s Montana. University of Arizona Press. p. 356. ISBN 978-0-8165-1503-5.
  35. ^ "Raynolds Peak". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved July 11, 2014.
  36. ^ Geological Survey Professional Paper, Issue 214. U.S. Geological Survey. 1953. p. 40.
  37. ^ "Engineers: Far From Ordinary" (PDF). The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in St. Louis. St. Louis District. 2011. pp. 383, 386.

External links edit

william, raynolds, william, franklin, raynolds, march, 1820, october, 1894, american, explorer, engineer, army, officer, served, mexican, american, american, civil, best, known, leading, 1859, raynolds, expedition, while, serving, member, army, corps, topograp. William Franklin Raynolds March 17 1820 October 18 1894 was an American explorer engineer and U S army officer who served in the Mexican American War and American Civil War He is best known for leading the 1859 60 Raynolds Expedition while serving as a member of the U S Army Corps of Topographical Engineers William F RaynoldsBirth nameWilliam Franklin RaynoldsBornMarch 17 1820Canton Ohio U S DiedOctober 18 1894 aged 74 Detroit Michigan U S Allegiance United StatesService wbr branch United States ArmyYears of service1843 1884RankColonel Brevet Brigadier GeneralUnitCorps of EngineersCorps of Topographical EngineersBattles warsMexican American WarAmerican Civil War During the 1850s and again after his participation in the Civil War Raynolds was the head engineer on numerous lighthouse construction projects He oversaw riverway and harbor dredging projects intended to improve accessibility and navigation for shipping As a cartographer Raynolds surveyed and mapped the islands and shorelines on the Great Lakes and other regions At least six lighthouses whose construction he oversaw are still standing Some are still in use and of these several are listed on the National Register of Historic Places In 1848 during the American occupation of Mexico after the Mexican American War Raynolds and other U S Army personnel were the first confirmed to have reached the summit of Pico de Orizaba the tallest mountain in Mexico and inadvertently set what may have been a 50 year American alpine altitude record In 1859 Raynolds was placed in charge of the first government sponsored expedition to venture into the upper Yellowstone region that was later to become Yellowstone National Park Heavy winter snowpack in the Absaroka Range of Wyoming prevented the expedition from reaching the Yellowstone Plateau forcing them to divert to the south and cross Union Pass at the northern end of the Wind River Range After negotiating the pass the expedition entered Jackson Hole and surveyed the Teton Range now within Grand Teton National Park During the Civil War Raynolds participated in the Battle of Cross Keys during the Valley Campaign of 1862 and a year later was in charge of fortifications in the defense of the military arsenal at Harpers Ferry West Virginia On March 13 1865 Raynolds was brevetted brigadier general for meritorious service during the Civil War After the war Lt Col Raynolds was assigned to a myriad of positions across the Nation to include establishing the St Louis Engineer Office of the U S Army Corps of Engineers from 1870 to 1872 Raynolds retired from the army on March 17 1884 with the permanent rank of colonel He was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society in 1867 1 Contents 1 Early life 2 Military career 2 1 Mexican American War 2 2 Lighthouse engineer 2 3 Raynolds Expedition 2 4 American Civil War 2 5 Postwar career 3 Legacy 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksEarly life editWilliam Franklin Raynolds was born on March 17 1820 in Canton Ohio the fourth of six children to William Raynolds November 2 1789 September 20 1829 and Elizabeth Seabury nee Fisk 1796 April 13 1853 2 William F Raynolds s grandfather was also named William Raynolds 1764 1814 and had been a veteran of the War of 1812 serving as a company captain from April 12 1812 until April 13 1813 During the War of 1812 the grandfather Raynolds rose to the rank of major while serving under Lewis Cass 3 William F Raynolds entered the United States Military Academy at West Point New York on July 1 1839 after being appointed a from Ohio 5 6 He graduated fifth out of 39 classmates in his class of 1843 which included William B Franklin Raynolds s friend Joseph J Reynolds and future president Ulysses S Grant 6 Raynolds married at a young age he and his wife had no children 5 Military career editInitially appointed a brevet second lieutenant in the 5th U S Infantry within a few weeks Raynolds was transferred to the U S Army Corps of Topographical Engineers 7 The Topographical Engineers performed surveys and developed maps for army use until their merger with the Corps of Engineers in 1863 8 Raynolds s first assignments from 1843 to 1844 were as an assistant topographical engineer involved in improving navigation on the Ohio River and surveying the northeastern boundary of the U S between 1844 and 1847 6 Mexican American War edit nbsp Pico de Orizaba was believed by Raynolds to be the tallest mountain in North America When war with Mexico seemed imminent topographic engineers were sent to the border to assist with the army s preparations Raynolds served in Winfield Scott s Mexican American War campaign that marched overland to Mexico City from the Gulf of Mexico seaport at Veracruz After the war the American army occupied Mexico City and the surrounding region During the occupation Raynolds and others set out to map and explore nearby mountains Raynolds s party is credited with being the first confirmed to climb to the summit of Pico de Orizaba 19 01 48 N 97 16 12 W 19 03000 N 97 27000 W 19 03000 97 27000 which at 18 620 feet 5 680 m is the tallest mountain in Mexico and third tallest in North America 9 10 Over a period of several months Raynolds and other officers from both the army and navy mapped the best approach route to Pico de Orizaba To assist them in their climb the party planned on taking grapnels attached to long ropes and primitive crampons in the form of shoes with projecting points to help ensure they could safely climb up cliffs and across glaciers 11 Told by local villagers that any attempt to reach the summit would be fruitless because no one had ever done it before b the Americans became even more determined to show the Mexicans it could be climbed 11 As the expedition left to ascend the mountain a long pack train of nearly fifty officers soldiers and native guides departed from the town of Orizaba in early May 1848 After several days of hiking through dense jungle the expedition slowly gained altitude and established a base camp at 12 000 ft 3 700 m Starting from base camp in the early morning of May 10 nearly two dozen climbers made the final push to the top of the mountain but only Raynolds and a few others reached the summit 11 According to mountaineer and author Leigh N Ortenburger this feat may have inadvertently set the American mountaineering altitude record for the next fifty years 12 Raynolds estimated the summit of Pico de Orizaba to be 17 907 ft 5 458 m above sea level which was slightly greater than previous estimates but below the modern known altitude As no higher peaks were known in North America at that time Raynolds believed Pico de Orizaba was the tallest mountain on the continent 11 The summit crater was covered in snow but estimated to be between 400 and 650 yards 370 and 590 m in diameter and 300 ft 91 m deep The American achievement was disputed by the Mexicans until an 1851 French expedition discovered an American flag on the summit with the year 1848 carved in the flagpole 11 Lighthouse engineer edit After returning from Mexico Raynolds resumed mapping the U S Canada border which he had been surveying before the war then embarked on a project to develop water resources for the nation s growing capital of Washington D C Raynolds traveled the Great Lakes for several years surveying and mapping shorelines while identifying potential lighthouse locations 13 After promotion to first lieutenant and then captain in 1857 he was assigned to design and supervise the construction of lighthouses along the Jersey Shore and the Delmarva Peninsula regions 6 in the late 1850s Raynolds supervised construction of the Fenwick Island Light in Delaware and the Cape May Light in New Jersey 14 In 1859 Raynolds was working on finishing the Jupiter Inlet Light in Jupiter Florida when he was reassigned to lead the first U S Government sponsored expedition to explore the Yellowstone region 15 Raynolds Expedition edit Main article Raynolds Expedition nbsp The Great Falls of the Missouri River 1860 by James D Hutton is one of the few remaining photographs taken during the expedition The wet plate photographic techniques available at the time of the expedition provided only poor quality imagery In early 1859 Raynolds was charged with leading an expedition into the Yellowstone region of Montana and Wyoming to determine as far as practicable everything relating to the Indians of the country its agricultural and mineralogical resources the navigability of its streams its topographical features and the facilities or obstacles which the latter present to the construction of rail or common roads 16 The expedition was carried out by a handful of technicians including photographer and topographer James D Hutton artist and mapmaker Anton Schonborn and geologist and naturalist Ferdinand V Hayden who led several later expeditions to the Yellowstone region 17 18 Raynolds s second in command was lieutenant Henry E Maynadier The expedition was supported by a small infantry detachment of 30 and was federally funded with 60 000 Experienced mountain man Jim Bridger was hired to guide the expedition 16 The expedition started in late May 1859 at St Louis Missouri then was transported by two steamboats up the Missouri River to New Fort Pierre South Dakota 19 In late June the expedition left New Fort Pierre and headed overland to Fort Sarpy where they encountered the Crow Indians Raynolds said the Crow were a small band compared to their neighbors but are famous warriors and according to common report seldom fail to hold their own with any of the tribes unless greatly outnumbered 20 Raynolds was impressed with Chief Red Bear and after assuring him the expedition meant only to pass through their territory and not linger traded with the Crow for seven horses 20 Raynolds divided his expedition sending a smaller detachment under Maynadier to explore the Tongue River a major tributary of the Yellowstone River Two of Maynadier s party James D Hutton and Zephyr Recontre the expedition s Sioux interpreter took a side trip to locate and investigate an isolated rock formation that had been seen from great distance by a previous expedition in 1857 Hutton was the first person of European descent to reach this rock formation in northeastern Wyoming later known as Devils Tower Raynolds never elaborated on this event mentioning it only in passing 18 21 By September 2 1859 Raynolds s detachment had followed the Yellowstone River to the confluence with the Bighorn River in south central Montana 19 The two parties under Raynolds and Maynadier reunited on October 12 1859 and wintered at Deer Creek Station on the Platte River in central Wyoming 18 22 nbsp Principal Chiefs of the Arapaho Tribe is an engraving after a photograph taken by James Hutton during the expedition The Arapaho interpreter Warshinun is seated at right The expedition recommenced its explorations in May 1860 Raynolds led a party north and west up the upstream portion of the Bighorn River which is today called the Wind River hoping to cross the mountains at Togwotee Pass in the Absaroka Range a mountain pass known to expedition guide Jim Bridger Meanwhile Maynadier led his party back north to the Bighorn River to explore it and its associated tributary streams more thoroughly The plan was for the two parties to reunite on June 30 1860 at Three Forks Montana so they could make observations of a total solar eclipse forecast for July 18 1860 16 18 Hampered by towering basaltic cliffs and deep snows Raynolds attempted for over a week to reconnoiter to the top of Togwotee Pass but was forced south due to the June 30 deadline for reaching Three Forks Bridger then led the party south over another pass in the northern Wind River Range that Raynolds named Union Pass to the west of which lay Jackson Hole and the Teton Range From there the expedition went southwest crossing the southern Teton Range at Teton Pass and entering Pierre s Hole in present day Idaho 18 Though Raynolds and his party managed to get to Three Forks by the scheduled date Maynadier s party was several days late which prevented a detachment heading north to observe the solar eclipse 16 The reunited expedition then headed home traveling from Fort Benton Montana to Fort Union near the Montana North Dakota border via steamboat It then journeyed overland to Omaha Nebraska where the expedition members were disbanded in October 1860 18 22 nbsp Hayden s geological map from the expedition that was published in 1869 Though the Raynolds Expedition was unsuccessful in exploring the region that later became Yellowstone National Park it was the first federally funded party to enter Jackson Hole and observe the Teton Range 23 The expedition covered over 2 500 miles 4 000 km and explored an area of nearly 250 000 square miles 650 000 km2 18 In a preliminary report sent east in 1859 Raynolds stated that the once abundant bison were being killed for their hides at such an alarming rate they might soon become extinct 24 Raynolds s immediate participation in the Civil War followed by a severe illness delayed him from presenting his report on the expedition until 1868 16 Research data and botanical specimens as well as fossils and geological items that had been collected during the expedition were sent to the Smithsonian Institution but were not studied in detail until after the war Much of the artwork created by Hutton and especially Schonborn was lost though several of Schonborn s chromolithographs appeared in Ferdinand V Hayden s 1883 report that was submitted after later expeditions 18 American Civil War edit Raynolds returned to Washington at the outbreak of the war and was made chief topographic engineer of the Department of Virginia in July 1861 The army lacked adequate maps for military use so Raynolds and his team of engineers began to survey and draw up maps of Virginia and the region of the western portion of that state that had remained loyal to the Union and would become the new state of West Virginia In 1862 Raynolds was engaged with John C Fremont s Mountain Department in chasing Stonewall Jackson up the Shenandoah Valley and participated in the Battle of Cross Keys 6 Raynolds spent two months recovering from illness after the Valley Campaign then was assigned as chief engineer of Middle Department and VIII Corps in January 1863 Promoted to major in the Corps of Engineers he found himself in charge of the defenses of vital Harpers Ferry West Virginia in March 1863 during Robert E Lee s second Confederate invasion of the north during the Gettysburg Campaign 6 On March 31 1863 the Corps of Topographical Engineers ceased to be an independent branch of the army and was merged into the Corps of Engineers and Raynolds served in that branch of the army for the rest of his career Officers from the two corps maintained their ranks based on the time at which they received their promotion 25 As the end of war approached and hostilities with the Sioux Indians loomed Raynolds s knowledge of and experiences in the Great Lakes region became more important to the army than his command of the fortifications of Harpers Ferry As a result he returned to the Great Lakes as superintending engineer of surveys and lighthouses in April 1864 and saw no further combat for the rest of his career 6 Before the war was over on March 13 1865 Raynolds was brevetted to brigadier general for meritorious service 6 Postwar career edit nbsp The construction of the Cape May Lighthouse was overseen by Raynolds in 1859 and the lighthouse is still in use It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973 After the Civil War the Corps of Engineers undertook a program of river and harbor improvements Raynolds supervised the dredging and improvement of navigation on the Arkansas Mississippi and Missouri Rivers He also helped supervise several harbor dredging and construction projects involving the harbor in Buffalo New York the Harbor of Refuge in New Buffalo Michigan Erie Harbor in Erie Pennsylvania and the river harbors of St Louis Missouri and Alton Illinois 6 Raynolds sited and oversaw the installation of dozens of lighthouses in the Great Lakes area where he served as the superintending engineer from 1864 to 1870 26 Raynolds was promoted to permanent rank of lieutenant colonel in the Corps of Engineers on March 7 1867 6 He then supervised lighthouse construction along the Gulf Coast and in New Jersey where he managed the construction of the Hereford Inlet Lighthouse in 1874 27 In 1870 work on the harbors received a boost when the Office of Western River Improvements relocated from Cincinnati Ohio to St Louis with the reassignment of Lt Col Raynolds as officer in charge Since the 1830s the work of the Office of Western River Improvements had been divided between the Ohio River on one hand and Mississippi Arkansas Red and Missouri rivers on the other In practice engineer officers in the Corps of Topographical Engineers maintained temporary offices near each project to oversee work including one in St Louis or Alton After the Civil War and the reunification of the Topographical Engineers and Corps of Engineers there were separate offices overseeing work on the Ohio River and Western Rivers each reporting separately to the Chief of Engineers Most of this work remained snag removal for which the Corps had built numerous snag removal vessels It was only logical to relocate the office closer to the projects being managed by moving the Office of Ohio River Improvements to Cincinnati and Western River Improvements to St Louis This was in essence the first step taken from a project based Corps office in St Louis to what became a district office overseeing regional projects By 1872 Raynolds was reporting from the Engineer Office in St Louis with responsibility from the Illinois to the Ohio River rather than from the Office of Western River Improvements which had ceased to exist 28 From May 5 to October 7 1877 Raynolds led a procession of American engineers to an engineering conference in Europe 6 Promoted to the permanent rank of colonel on January 2 1881 Raynolds continued serving with the Corps of Engineers supporting a variety of harbor and river navigational improvements until his retirement in 1884 after a military career spanning forty years 6 As he approached retirement Raynolds was elected a trustee of the Presbyterian Church 29 According to West Point classmate Joseph Reynolds who saw him at the West Point graduates reunion in 1893 Raynolds maintained a vigorous and healthy appearance long after his retirement his brown hair then but slightly sprinkled with gray 5 Raynolds died on October 18 1894 in Detroit Michigan leaving his widow a substantial estate for the time estimated at between US 50 000 1 831 200 today and 100 000 3 662 400 today 2 After providing for his widow his will directed that after her death the entire estate would be donated to the Presbyterian Church 2 5 Raynolds was interred in West Lawn Cemetery in Canton Ohio 30 Legacy editRaynolds s 1848 expedition to the summit of Pico de Orizaba in Mexico predated what is known as the Golden age of alpinism 1854 65 when many major mountain peaks in the Alps were first climbed The effort to summit the mountain was one of the earliest deliberate attempts to climb a major mountain peak and involved logistics planning and use of rudimentary climbing equipment making it one of the more serious mountaineering expeditions undertaken to that point in history 11 Though unable to penetrate into the heart of what later became Yellowstone National Park the Raynolds Expedition produced maps that were used by subsequent explorers to the greater Yellowstone region 16 Raynolds also located suitable wagon routes in the Bighorn Basin and was able to help narrow down the most appropriate routes for a future transcontinental railroad The Raynolds Expedition further determined that few if any rivers in the region would be suitable for steamboats due to numerous rapids and steep gradients 31 Several lighthouses whose construction was designed or supervised by Raynolds are still in use and several are listed on the National Register of Historic Places 32 At least two geographical locations are named for William Raynolds The mountain gap where his expedition crossed the Continental Divide between southwest Montana and northeast Idaho is named Raynolds Pass 44 42 40 N 111 28 11 W 44 71111 N 111 46972 W 44 71111 111 46972 33 34 and Raynolds Peak 43 52 15 N 110 49 30 W 43 87083 N 110 82500 W 43 87083 110 82500 is an isolated peak in the Teton Range that was named after him in 1938 12 18 35 The fossil remains of the extinct gastropod Viviparus raynoldsanus was named by Ferdinand V Hayden in honor of Raynolds after the specimen was collected in the Powder River Basin during the expedition 18 36 Lt Col William F Rayholds is credited with being the first Commander of the St Louis Engineer Office now District with the U S Army Corps of Engineers USACE as it transferred from the Office of Western River Improvements out of Cincinnati 37 Notes edit Before the American Civil War 1860 65 appointments to the United States Military Academy usually occurred after a nominee petitioned his U S Representative in Congress If the Representative believed the nominee was up to the task deserving of the opportunity and of the right character the nominee would then be appointed to attend the academy U S Representatives could make only one appointment per year 4 In 1838 French Belgian botanist Henri Guillaume Galeotti may have climbed as high as the mountain crater but he made no claim to have reached the summit Neither the Mexicans nor the Americans were aware of Galeotti s earlier visit 11 References edit APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved April 23 2021 a b c Appletons Annual Cyclopaedia and Register of Important Events Vol 34 D Appleton 1895 p 595 ASIN B005644AE2 William Henry Perrin ed 1881 History of Stark County With an Outline Sketch of Ohio Baskin amp Battey pp 628 629 Morrison James L July 1998 The Best School West Point 1833 1866 Kent State University Press pp 62 63 ISBN 978 0 87338 612 8 a b c d Twenty First Annual Reunion of the Association Graduates of the United States Military Academy at West Point New York June 12 1890 The Association of the Graduates of the United States Military Academy Evening News Printing and Binding House 43 45 1890 a b c d e f g h i j k l Cullum George W Edward S Holden April 16 2012 1171 William F Raynolds Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the U S Military Academy at West Point N Y Nos 1001 2000 Nabu Press pp 154 156 ISBN 978 1 248 90378 0 The Beginnings to 1815 The U S Army Corps of Engineers A Brief History U S Army Corps of Engineers Retrieved June 12 2014 Roster of the Corps of Topographical Engineers U S Corps of Topographical Engineers Archived from the original on November 3 2014 Retrieved June 12 2014 Pico de Orizaba Mexico NASA Earth Observatory NASA February 28 2011 Retrieved August 30 2014 White Sidney E 2002 Glaciers of North America Glaciers of Mexico PDF U S Geological Survey Professional Paper 1386 J U S Geological Survey p J384 Retrieved January 3 2015 a b c d e f g Thompson Jerry April 2002 Winfield Scott s Army of Occupation as Pioneer Alpinists Epic Ascents of Popocatepetl and Citlaltepetl The Southwestern Historical Quarterly 105 4 Texas State Historical Association 574 580 JSTOR 30239309 a b Ortenburger Leigh N Reynold G Jackson 1996 A Climber s Guide to the Teton Range The Mountaineers Books p 374 ISBN 978 0 89886 480 9 Beers Henry P 1942 A History of the U S Topographical Engineers 1813 1863 The Military Engineer 34 200 201 Jun 1942 pp 287 91 amp Jul 1942 pp 348 52 Archived from the original on September 26 2014 Retrieved January 3 2015 United States House of Representatives 1860 Receipts and Expenditures House Documents 123 and 126 U S Government Printing Office 183 Snyder James Fall 2006 Jupiter Inlet Lighthouse A Foothold on the Southeast Florida Frontier PDF U S Lighthouse Society Retrieved March 5 2020 a b c d e f Baldwin Kenneth H 2005 II Terra Incognita The Raynolds Expedition of 1860 Enchanted Enclosure The Army Engineers and Yellowstone National Park University Press of the Pacific ISBN 978 1 4102 2180 3 Archived from the original on October 23 2012 Retrieved July 13 2014 Harris Ann G Esther Tuttle Sherwood D Tuttle 2003 Geology of National Parks 6th ed Kendall Hunt Pub Co p 649 ISBN 978 0 7872 9970 5 a b c d e f g h i j Merrill Daniel D and Marlene Deahl ed June 15 2012 Up the Winds and Over the Tetons Journal Entries and Images from the 1860 Raynolds Expedition University of New Mexico Press ISBN 978 0 8263 5097 8 a b Raynolds Expedition 1859 60 and Bighorn Canyon Part 1 National Park Service Retrieved June 13 2014 a b Raynolds William F 1868 Report on the Exploration of the Yellowstone River Kessinger Publishing LLC pp 50 51 ISBN 978 1 4370 6624 1 Mattison Ray H 1955 The First Fifty Years Early Exploration History and Culture National Park Service Retrieved June 15 2014 a b Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution Smithsonian Institution 1906 p 589 Chittenden Hiram M 2005 Chapter VII Raynolds Expedition The Yellowstone National Park Historical and Descriptive Kessinger Publishing LLC p 57 ISBN 978 1 4179 0456 3 Historical Vignette 092 Engineers Warned of Extinction of the Noble Buffalo U S Army Corps of Engineers 2004 Retrieved July 13 2014 Reunification of the Corps of Engineers and the Corps of Topographical Engineers U S Corps of Topographical Engineers Archived from the original on July 19 2013 Retrieved November 22 2014 Cullum George W October 27 2009 Biographical Register of the Officers Applewood Books pp 158 159 ISBN 978 1 4290 2129 6 Veasey David May 28 2000 Guarding New Jersey s Shore Lighthouses and Life Saving Stations Arcadia Publishing p 40 ISBN 978 0 7385 0417 9 Manders Damon Rentfro Brian September 1 2011 Engineers Far From Ordinary PDF The U S Army Corps of Engineers in St Louis pp 47 49 Archived PDF from the original on November 25 2023 Presbyterian Church in the U S A General Assembly Minutes of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America Presbyterian Board of Publication 1881 p 776 Eicher John Eicher David June 28 2002 Civil War High Commands Stanford University Press p 684 ISBN 978 0 8047 3641 1 Raynolds William Franklin 1868 Report on the Exploration of the Yellowstone River U S Army Corps of Engineers Government Printing Office pp 12 18 ISBN 978 1 4370 6624 1 Cape May County PDF New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places State of New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection October 22 2014 Archived from the original PDF on January 28 2016 Retrieved January 4 2014 List includes New Hereford and Cape May lighthouses Raynolds Pass Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior Retrieved July 11 2014 Works Projects Administration August 1 1994 The WPA Guide to 1930s Montana University of Arizona Press p 356 ISBN 978 0 8165 1503 5 Raynolds Peak Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior Retrieved July 11 2014 Geological Survey Professional Paper Issue 214 U S Geological Survey 1953 p 40 Engineers Far From Ordinary PDF The U S Army Corps of Engineers in St Louis St Louis District 2011 pp 383 386 External links editWorks by or about William F Raynolds at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William F Raynolds amp oldid 1192691583, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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