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Fort Bridger

Fort Bridger was originally a 19th-century fur trading outpost established in 1842, on Blacks Fork of the Green River, in what is now Uinta County, Wyoming, United States. It became a vital resupply point for wagon trains on the Oregon Trail, California Trail, and Mormon Trail. The Army established a military post here in 1858 during the Utah War, until it was finally closed in 1890. A small town, Fort Bridger, Wyoming, remains near the fort and takes its name from it.

Fort Bridger
Fort Bridger
Fort Bridger
Site of fort in Wyoming
Fort Bridger
Fort Bridger (the United States)
LocationUinta County, Wyoming
Nearest cityFort Bridger, Wyoming
Coordinates41°19′4″N 110°23′31″W / 41.31778°N 110.39194°W / 41.31778; -110.39194Coordinates: 41°19′4″N 110°23′31″W / 41.31778°N 110.39194°W / 41.31778; -110.39194
NRHP reference No.69000197
Added to NRHP1969-04-16

Bridger's Trading Post

The post was established by the mountain man Jim Bridger, after whom it is named, and Louis Vasquez.[1] In December 1843, Bridger wrote Pierre Chouteau Jr., "I have established a small fort, with a blacksmith shop and a supply of iron in the road of emigrants on Black Fork of Green River, which promises fairly." According to Stanley Vestal, "His fort consisted simply of an eight-foot stockade, with a corral adjoining on the north. Within that stockade stood four log cabins with flat dirt roofs. One of these housed Bridger's forge and carpenter's bench, another his store, the third his family and possibles, while the fourth was the home of his partner." On 19 October 1852, Mrs. Benjamin G. Ferris visited with her husband, and described the fort as "- a long, low, strongly-constructed log building, surrounded by a high wall of logs, stuck endwise in the ground." On 9 March 1854, Bridger filed a claim with the General Land Office, for the 3,800 acres (1,500 hectares) around the fort.[2]

Richard Francis Burton visited the fort in August 1860, and later wrote, "Colonel Bridger, when an Indian trader, placed this post upon a kind of neutral ground between the Snakes and the Crows (Hapsaroke) on the north, the Oglalas and other Sioux to the east, the Arapahoes and Cheyennes on the south, and various tribes of Yutas (Utahs) on the southwest.[3]: 31  Bridger, perhaps the most picturesque figure in early Wyoming, was often called the "Daniel Boone" of the Rockies. Bridger’s Pass, which he discovered, was also named for him.[4]

In 1845, Lansford Hastings published a guide entitled The Emigrant's Guide to Oregon and California, which advised California emigrants to leave the Oregon Trail at Fort Bridger, pass through the Wasatch Range across the Great Salt Lake Desert (an 80-mile waterless drive), loop around the Ruby Mountains, and rejoin the California Trail about seven miles west of modern Elko, Nevada (now Emigrant Pass). The ill-fated Donner-Reed Party followed that route, along which they were met by a rider sent by Hastings to deliver letters to traveling emigrants. On July 12, the Donners and Reeds were given one of these letters,[5] in which among other messages, Hastings claimed to have "worked out a new and better road to California", and said he would be waiting at Fort Bridger to guide the emigrants along the new cutoff.[6]

Mormons and Fort Supply

On 7 July 1847, Orson Pratt was amongst the first party of Mormons to arrive at the fort. He described the fort as, "Bridger's post consists of two adjoining log houses, dirt roofs, and a small picket yard of logs set in the ground, and about eight feet high." Nine native lodges were located nearby.[3]

With the arrival of the Mormon pioneers in 1847, disputes arose between Bridger and the new settlers. By 1853, a militia of Mormons was sent to arrest him for selling alcohol and firearms to the Native Americans, a violation of Federal Law.[7] He escaped capture and temporarily returned to the East. Near the existing fort, the Mormons established their own Fort Supply the same year. In 1855, Mormons took over Fort Bridger, reportedly having bought it for $8,000 in gold coins.[8] The Mormons claimed, over Bridger's denials, they had purchased the fort from Vasquez. There was a deed dated August 3, 1855, recorded October 21, 1858, in Salt Lake City in Records Book B. p. 128, that ostensibly sold Fort Bridger to the LDS Church. Bridger and Vasquez's names were signed by H.F. Morrell in the presence of Alinerin Grow and William Adams Hickman, purportedly pursuant to a power of attorney. Bridger was absent from the area in 1855, acting as guide for Sir St George Gore.[9]

Andrew Jenson noted, "From 1853 to 1857, Fort Bridger was quite an important 'Mormon' outpost." Orson Hyde arrived at the fort on 13 November 1853, with 39 Mormon settlers. They established Fort Supply on Willow Creek, about 12 miles (19 km) southwest of Fort Bridger. Jenson goes on to state, "Fort Bridger and Fort Supply were deserted by the 'Mormons' in September, 1857, on the approach of Col. Johnston's army."[3]: 28–29 

 
Fort Bridger, 1850.

Military Post

 
Fort Bridger, 1858. By Samuel C. Mills, photographer with the Simpson Expedition.

On 18 November 1857, Bridger leased his surveyed land to the United States, though payment was withheld until Bridger could establish title. Colonel Albert Sidney Johnston was to use the land for his army during the Utah War. Relations had deteriorated between Mormon leaders in Utah Territory and federal authorities in Washington, D.C. President James Buchanan ordered the United States Army to install a new governor, Alfred Cumming to replace Brigham Young. As the army of 2500 advanced in November 1857, the Mormons set fire to the Fort Bridger buildings. Johnston kept his supplies, with a garrison, within the stone walls which remained, while the army wintered at Camp Scott nearby. In June 1858, as the majority of Johnston's Army set off for Salt Lake City, two companies of troops remained behind. The other troops continued on and eventually established Camp Floyd south of Salt Lake City.[10][3]: 18, 21–29 

Major William Hoffman commanded the army depot of Fort Bridger from 7 June 1858, until 17 August, when he was relieved by Brevet Lt. Col. Edward Canby. Elements of the Sixth and Tenth Infantry, and First Cavalry, erected storehouses and troop quarters. On 14 July 1859, orders established a military reservation at Fort Bridger amounting to 500 square miles (1,300 km2). Major Richard C. Gatlin took over command on 7 March 1860. Captain Alfred Cumming took command on 4 June 1860, followed by Captain Franklin Gardner on 7 August 1860. Captain Jesse Gove commanded from 29 May 1861 until 9 August, when the number of troops was reduced due to demands of the American Civil War. Captain M.G. Lewis took over command in December 1862, followed by Major Noyes Baldwin in 1865. Captain Anson Mills assumed command from November 1866 until August 1867.[3]: 30–36, 44 

In 1858, William A. Carter was appointed as post sutler at Fort Bridger. Perhaps more than any other individual, the history of the post revolves around this civilian merchant who remained at the center of the post's activities for his lifetime. When William A. Carter died in November 1881, his wife, Mary Elizabeth Hamilton Carter, became sutler, then renamed as the post trader until 1890. Judge Carter was a probate judge who had served in the army during the Seminole Wars. He managed both his sutler's store, and the post office, under one roof.[11][3]: 32–33, 49 

Chief Washakie signed the Fort Bridger Treaty of 1868 at the fort on 3 July, which ceded the Shoshone and Bannock lands in southwestern Wyoming, and created the Wind River Indian Reservation.[3]: 47–48 

Lieutenant Colonel Henry Morrow was in command from 9 November 1867 until 17 April 1869. During this time, Fort Bridger troops helped guard construction of the Overland Route (Union Pacific Railroad) and the Overland Stage and Mail route. In the summer of 1870, Yale College Professor Othniel Charles Marsh used the fort as a base camp during a geological expedition. The fort was also host to the geological survey conducted by Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden from 12 September to 1 October 1870.[3]: 48–49, 75  Ultimately, the expansion of the railroads in the west made this and other forts obsolete. Fort Bridger was first abandoned in 1878 but then was re-established two years later. The Army closed the post in 1890 when Wyoming became a state.[12]

Preservation

The historical Fort Bridger has several interesting old buildings still standing: the old Pony Express barn and the Mormon protective wall.[4][13]: 117–119 

On 27 June 1928, the site of the fort, and remaining buildings, were sold to the Historical Landmark Commission of Wyoming. Dedication ceremonies were held on 25 June 1933 establishing Fort Bridger as a Wyoming Historical Landmark and Museum. The Annual Fort Bridger Muzzle Loading Rendezvous is held every Labor Day weekend.[3]: 72–74 [13]

 
Map of the Pony Express Route in 1860
by William Henry Jackson ~ courtesy the Library of Congress

See also

References

  1. ^ Alter, J. Cecil (1962). Jim Bridger. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press.
  2. ^ Vestal, Stanley (1970). Jim Bridger; Mountain Man. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. pp. 153, 187–190. ISBN 9780803257207.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Ellison, R.S. (1981). Fort Bridger; A Brief History. The Wyoming State Archives, Museums and Historical Department. p. 11. ISBN 0943398045.
  4. ^ a b Godfrey, Anthony (August 1994). Pony Express National Historic Trail Historic Resource Study. National Park Service.
  5. ^ Johnson, pp. 6–7.
  6. ^ Andrews, Thomas F. (April 1973). "Lansford W. Hastings and the Promotion of the Great Salt Lake Cutoff: A Reappraisal". The Western Historical Quarterly. 4 (2): 133–150. doi:10.2307/967168. JSTOR 967168.
  7. ^ "Fort Bridger, Wyoming State Historic Site". Legendsofamerica.com. Retrieved 2012-08-15.
  8. ^ Gowans, Fred R. & Campbell, Eugene E. (1976). Fort Supply: Brigham Young's Green River Experiment. Provo, UT: Brigham Young University.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  9. ^ "Fort Bridger Photos". Wyomingtalesandtrails.com. Retrieved 2012-08-15.
  10. ^ Ellison, R. S. (1931). Fort Bridger: A Brief History.
  11. ^ Connor, P.E. William Alexander and Mary E. Carter Papers. Utah State University. Special Collections. MSS 29. http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv50091
  12. ^ "About - Fort Bridger State Historic Site". Wyoming Division of State Parks and Historic Sites. Retrieved October 20, 2018.
  13. ^ a b Gowans, Fred; Campbell, Eugene (1975). Fort Bridger: Island in the Wilderness. Provo: Brigham Young University Press. pp. 166–167. ISBN 0842504206.

External links

  • Fort Bridger at the National Archives and Records Administration
  • Fort Bridger page, Wyoming Department of State Parks and Historic Sites
  • from the Wyoming State Historic Preservation Office
  • Fort Bridger - Legends of America information
  • fortbridgerrendezvous.net - Additional information about the Fort Bridger Rendezvous.

fort, bridger, census, designated, place, wyoming, originally, 19th, century, trading, outpost, established, 1842, blacks, fork, green, river, what, uinta, county, wyoming, united, states, became, vital, resupply, point, wagon, trains, oregon, trail, californi. For the census designated place see Fort Bridger Wyoming Fort Bridger was originally a 19th century fur trading outpost established in 1842 on Blacks Fork of the Green River in what is now Uinta County Wyoming United States It became a vital resupply point for wagon trains on the Oregon Trail California Trail and Mormon Trail The Army established a military post here in 1858 during the Utah War until it was finally closed in 1890 A small town Fort Bridger Wyoming remains near the fort and takes its name from it Fort BridgerU S National Register of Historic PlacesFort BridgerFort BridgerSite of fort in WyomingShow map of WyomingFort BridgerFort Bridger the United States Show map of the United StatesLocationUinta County WyomingNearest cityFort Bridger WyomingCoordinates41 19 4 N 110 23 31 W 41 31778 N 110 39194 W 41 31778 110 39194 Coordinates 41 19 4 N 110 23 31 W 41 31778 N 110 39194 W 41 31778 110 39194NRHP reference No 69000197Added to NRHP1969 04 16 Contents 1 Bridger s Trading Post 2 Mormons and Fort Supply 3 Military Post 4 Preservation 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksBridger s Trading Post EditThe post was established by the mountain man Jim Bridger after whom it is named and Louis Vasquez 1 In December 1843 Bridger wrote Pierre Chouteau Jr I have established a small fort with a blacksmith shop and a supply of iron in the road of emigrants on Black Fork of Green River which promises fairly According to Stanley Vestal His fort consisted simply of an eight foot stockade with a corral adjoining on the north Within that stockade stood four log cabins with flat dirt roofs One of these housed Bridger s forge and carpenter s bench another his store the third his family and possibles while the fourth was the home of his partner On 19 October 1852 Mrs Benjamin G Ferris visited with her husband and described the fort as a long low strongly constructed log building surrounded by a high wall of logs stuck endwise in the ground On 9 March 1854 Bridger filed a claim with the General Land Office for the 3 800 acres 1 500 hectares around the fort 2 Richard Francis Burton visited the fort in August 1860 and later wrote Colonel Bridger when an Indian trader placed this post upon a kind of neutral ground between the Snakes and the Crows Hapsaroke on the north the Oglalas and other Sioux to the east the Arapahoes and Cheyennes on the south and various tribes of Yutas Utahs on the southwest 3 31 Bridger perhaps the most picturesque figure in early Wyoming was often called the Daniel Boone of the Rockies Bridger s Pass which he discovered was also named for him 4 In 1845 Lansford Hastings published a guide entitled The Emigrant s Guide to Oregon and California which advised California emigrants to leave the Oregon Trail at Fort Bridger pass through the Wasatch Range across the Great Salt Lake Desert an 80 mile waterless drive loop around the Ruby Mountains and rejoin the California Trail about seven miles west of modern Elko Nevada now Emigrant Pass The ill fated Donner Reed Party followed that route along which they were met by a rider sent by Hastings to deliver letters to traveling emigrants On July 12 the Donners and Reeds were given one of these letters 5 in which among other messages Hastings claimed to have worked out a new and better road to California and said he would be waiting at Fort Bridger to guide the emigrants along the new cutoff 6 Mormons and Fort Supply EditMain article Fort Supply Utah Territory On 7 July 1847 Orson Pratt was amongst the first party of Mormons to arrive at the fort He described the fort as Bridger s post consists of two adjoining log houses dirt roofs and a small picket yard of logs set in the ground and about eight feet high Nine native lodges were located nearby 3 With the arrival of the Mormon pioneers in 1847 disputes arose between Bridger and the new settlers By 1853 a militia of Mormons was sent to arrest him for selling alcohol and firearms to the Native Americans a violation of Federal Law 7 He escaped capture and temporarily returned to the East Near the existing fort the Mormons established their own Fort Supply the same year In 1855 Mormons took over Fort Bridger reportedly having bought it for 8 000 in gold coins 8 The Mormons claimed over Bridger s denials they had purchased the fort from Vasquez There was a deed dated August 3 1855 recorded October 21 1858 in Salt Lake City in Records Book B p 128 that ostensibly sold Fort Bridger to the LDS Church Bridger and Vasquez s names were signed by H F Morrell in the presence of Alinerin Grow and William Adams Hickman purportedly pursuant to a power of attorney Bridger was absent from the area in 1855 acting as guide for Sir St George Gore 9 Andrew Jenson noted From 1853 to 1857 Fort Bridger was quite an important Mormon outpost Orson Hyde arrived at the fort on 13 November 1853 with 39 Mormon settlers They established Fort Supply on Willow Creek about 12 miles 19 km southwest of Fort Bridger Jenson goes on to state Fort Bridger and Fort Supply were deserted by the Mormons in September 1857 on the approach of Col Johnston s army 3 28 29 Fort Bridger 1850 Military Post Edit Fort Bridger 1858 By Samuel C Mills photographer with the Simpson Expedition On 18 November 1857 Bridger leased his surveyed land to the United States though payment was withheld until Bridger could establish title Colonel Albert Sidney Johnston was to use the land for his army during the Utah War Relations had deteriorated between Mormon leaders in Utah Territory and federal authorities in Washington D C President James Buchanan ordered the United States Army to install a new governor Alfred Cumming to replace Brigham Young As the army of 2500 advanced in November 1857 the Mormons set fire to the Fort Bridger buildings Johnston kept his supplies with a garrison within the stone walls which remained while the army wintered at Camp Scott nearby In June 1858 as the majority of Johnston s Army set off for Salt Lake City two companies of troops remained behind The other troops continued on and eventually established Camp Floyd south of Salt Lake City 10 3 18 21 29 Major William Hoffman commanded the army depot of Fort Bridger from 7 June 1858 until 17 August when he was relieved by Brevet Lt Col Edward Canby Elements of the Sixth and Tenth Infantry and First Cavalry erected storehouses and troop quarters On 14 July 1859 orders established a military reservation at Fort Bridger amounting to 500 square miles 1 300 km2 Major Richard C Gatlin took over command on 7 March 1860 Captain Alfred Cumming took command on 4 June 1860 followed by Captain Franklin Gardner on 7 August 1860 Captain Jesse Gove commanded from 29 May 1861 until 9 August when the number of troops was reduced due to demands of the American Civil War Captain M G Lewis took over command in December 1862 followed by Major Noyes Baldwin in 1865 Captain Anson Mills assumed command from November 1866 until August 1867 3 30 36 44 In 1858 William A Carter was appointed as post sutler at Fort Bridger Perhaps more than any other individual the history of the post revolves around this civilian merchant who remained at the center of the post s activities for his lifetime When William A Carter died in November 1881 his wife Mary Elizabeth Hamilton Carter became sutler then renamed as the post trader until 1890 Judge Carter was a probate judge who had served in the army during the Seminole Wars He managed both his sutler s store and the post office under one roof 11 3 32 33 49 Chief Washakie signed the Fort Bridger Treaty of 1868 at the fort on 3 July which ceded the Shoshone and Bannock lands in southwestern Wyoming and created the Wind River Indian Reservation 3 47 48 Lieutenant Colonel Henry Morrow was in command from 9 November 1867 until 17 April 1869 During this time Fort Bridger troops helped guard construction of the Overland Route Union Pacific Railroad and the Overland Stage and Mail route In the summer of 1870 Yale College Professor Othniel Charles Marsh used the fort as a base camp during a geological expedition The fort was also host to the geological survey conducted by Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden from 12 September to 1 October 1870 3 48 49 75 Ultimately the expansion of the railroads in the west made this and other forts obsolete Fort Bridger was first abandoned in 1878 but then was re established two years later The Army closed the post in 1890 when Wyoming became a state 12 Preservation EditThe historical Fort Bridger has several interesting old buildings still standing the old Pony Express barn and the Mormon protective wall 4 13 117 119 On 27 June 1928 the site of the fort and remaining buildings were sold to the Historical Landmark Commission of Wyoming Dedication ceremonies were held on 25 June 1933 establishing Fort Bridger as a Wyoming Historical Landmark and Museum The Annual Fort Bridger Muzzle Loading Rendezvous is held every Labor Day weekend 3 72 74 13 Map of the Pony Express Route in 1860by William Henry Jackson courtesy the Library of CongressSee also EditCharles Howard List of the oldest buildings in WyomingReferences Edit Alter J Cecil 1962 Jim Bridger Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press Vestal Stanley 1970 Jim Bridger Mountain Man Lincoln University of Nebraska Press pp 153 187 190 ISBN 9780803257207 a b c d e f g h i Ellison R S 1981 Fort Bridger A Brief History The Wyoming State Archives Museums and Historical Department p 11 ISBN 0943398045 a b Godfrey Anthony August 1994 Pony Express National Historic Trail Historic Resource Study National Park Service Johnson pp 6 7 Andrews Thomas F April 1973 Lansford W Hastings and the Promotion of the Great Salt Lake Cutoff A Reappraisal The Western Historical Quarterly 4 2 133 150 doi 10 2307 967168 JSTOR 967168 Fort Bridger Wyoming State Historic Site Legendsofamerica com Retrieved 2012 08 15 Gowans Fred R amp Campbell Eugene E 1976 Fort Supply Brigham Young s Green River Experiment Provo UT Brigham Young University a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Fort Bridger Photos Wyomingtalesandtrails com Retrieved 2012 08 15 Ellison R S 1931 Fort Bridger A Brief History Connor P E William Alexander and Mary E Carter Papers Utah State University Special Collections MSS 29 http archiveswest orbiscascade org ark 80444 xv50091 About Fort Bridger State Historic Site Wyoming Division of State Parks and Historic Sites Retrieved October 20 2018 a b Gowans Fred Campbell Eugene 1975 Fort Bridger Island in the Wilderness Provo Brigham Young University Press pp 166 167 ISBN 0842504206 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fort Bridger Fort Bridger at the National Archives and Records Administration Fort Bridger page Wyoming Department of State Parks and Historic Sites Fort Bridger info from the Wyoming State Historic Preservation Office Fort Bridger Legends of America information fortbridgerrendezvous net Additional information about the Fort Bridger Rendezvous Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fort Bridger amp oldid 1124861839, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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