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_Trout Lake_ (6,850)--D: 13--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Turbid Lake_ (7,800)--K: 11--1878--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Twin Lakes_ (7,450)--G: 6--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Wapiti Lake_ (8,500)--H: 11--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_White Lake_ (8,150)--I: 11--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Woods, Lake of the_ (7,550)--F: 6--1885--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Yellowstone Lake_ (7,741)--K--0: 8--12--From the river which flows through it. This lake was named, on the map showing "Colter's Route in 1807," Lake Eustis, in honor of William Eustis, Secretary of War to President Madison, 1809 to 1812.
Later it appears as Sublette Lake, in honor of the noted fur trader, William Sublette. It is even said at one time to have borne the "fugitive name," Riddle Lake. But it early became known by its present name.
The islands of this lake are seven in number. They seem to have all been named by the United States Geological Survey largely for the employes of the survey. They are:
_Carrington Island._ For Campbell Carrington, zoologist.
_Dot Island._ A mere dot on the map.
_Frank Island._ For the brother of Henry W. Elliott, a member of the Hayden Expedition of 1871. This Island was renamed Belknap Island in 1875 by the members of Secretary Belknap's party, who pa.s.sed through the Park in that year. The name, however, never came into use.
_Molly Island._--For the wife of Mr. Henry Gannett.
_Peale Island._--For Dr. A. C. Peale, author of the elaborate report on thermal springs which appears in Hayden's report for 1878.
_Pelican Roost._--Characteristic.
_Stevenson Island._--For James Stevenson. See "Mt. Stevenson."
The bays are also seven in number, of which only the following merit notice:
_Mary Bay._--Named by Henry W. Elliott for Miss Mary Force.
_Thumb._--From the old fancy that the form of the lake resembled that of the human hand.
_Bridge Bay._--From Bridge Creek. See "Bridge Creek."
The capes are thirteen in number. We need notice only Signal Point, which was much used in signaling by the early explorers; Steamboat Point, named from the Steamboat Springs near by; and Storm Point, so named because it receives the full force of the prevailing south-west winds from across the lake.
"_The Annie._"--The first boat on the Yellowstone Lake was a small canva.s.s craft 12 feet long by 3-1/2 feet wide. Dr. Hayden records that, it was, christened _The Annie_, "by Mr. Stevenson, in compliment to Miss Anna L. Dawes, the amiable daughter of Hon. H. L. Dawes."
[Ill.u.s.tration: "The Annie."]
The boat was extemporized by Mr. James Stevenson from such materials as could be picked up. In the cla.s.sic picture of this historic craft, the persons in the boat are James Stevenson and Henry W. Elliott. An original photograph of the boat now adorns the cabin of the _Zillah_, the small steamboat which conveys tourists about the Lake.
APPENDIX A.
VI.
MISCELLANEOUS FEATURES.
[Numbers in parentheses indicate alt.i.tudes.]
_Craig Pa.s.s_ (8,300)--L: 6--1891--From the maiden name of Mrs. Ida Craig Wilc.o.x, the first tourist to cross the pa.s.s.
[Ill.u.s.tration: FERDINAND VANDIVEER HAYDEN]
_Hayden Valley_ (7,800)--H-J: 8-10-1878--U.S.G.S. For the eminent American geologist, Ferdinand Vandiveer Hayden, M.D., LL. D., whose important part in the history of the Yellowstone National Park has been fully set forth in previous pages. The following condensed sketch of his life is from the pen of Dr. A. C. Peale:[CR]
[CR] Bulletin Philosophical Society of Washington, Vol. VI, pp.
476-478.
... "He was born at Westfield, Ma.s.s., September 7, 1829.... His father died when he was about ten years of age, and about two years later he went to live with an uncle at Rochester, in Lorain County, Ohio, where he remained for six years. He taught in the country district schools of the neighborhood during his sixteenth and seventeenth years, and at the age of eighteen went to Oberlin College, where he was graduated in 1850....
"He studied medicine with Dr. J. S. Newberry, at Cleveland, and at Albany was graduated Doctor of Medicine in the early part of 1853.
After his graduation, he was sent by Prof. James Hall, of New York, to the Bad Lands of White River, in Dakota. The years 1854 and 1855 he spent exploring and collecting fossils in the Upper Missouri country, mainly at his own expense. From 1856 until 1859, he was connected as geologist with the expeditious of Lieutenant Warren, engaged in explorations in Nebraska and Dakota. From 1859 until 1862, he was surgeon, naturalist, and geologist with Captain W. F. Raynolds, in the exploration of the Yellowstone and Missouri Rivers. In October, 1862, he was appointed acting a.s.sistant surgeon and a.s.sistant medical inspector until June, 1865, when he resigned, and was brevetted lieutenant-colonel for meritorious services during the war. He then resumed his scientific work, and in 1866 made another trip to the Bad Lands of Dakota, this time in the interest of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. In 1865, he was elected professor of mineralogy and geology in the University of Pennsylvania, which position he resigned in 1872. From 1867 to 1879, his history is that of the organization of which he had charge, which began as a geological survey of Nebraska, and became finally the Geological Survey of the Territories.... From 1879 until December, 1886, he was connected with the United States Geological Survey as geologist. His health began to fail soon after his connection with this organization, and gradually became worse, and he lived only a year after his resignation.
"In 1876, the degree of LL.D. was conferred upon him by the University of Rochester, and in June, 1886, he received the same degree from the University of Pennsylvania. He was a member of seventeen scientific societies in the United States, among them the National Academy of Sciences, and was honorary and corresponding member of some seventy foreign societies. A bibliography of his writings includes 158 t.i.tles.
"... The gentleness and diffidence, approaching even timidity, which impressed his fellow-students at Oberlin, characterized Dr. Hayden throughout his life, and rendered it somewhat difficult for those who did not know him intimately to understand the reasons for his success, which was undoubtedly due to his energy and perseverance, qualities which were equally characteristic of him as a boy and student and in later life. His desire to forward the cause of science was sincere and enthusiastic, and he was always ready to modify his views upon the presentation of evidence. He was intensely nervous, frequently impulsive, but ever generous, and his honesty and integrity undoubted.
The greater part of his work for the government and for science was a labor of love."
_Jones Pa.s.s_ (9,450)--K: 12--1880--Norris--For its discoverer, Captain W. A. Jones, Corps of Engineers, U. S. A., who pa.s.sed through it in 1873.
_Kingman Pa.s.s_ (7,230)--D: 6--1883--U. S. G. S.--The pa.s.s of which Golden Gate is the northern entrance. For Lieutenant D. C. Kingman, Corps of Engineers, U. S. A., who built the road through the pa.s.s.
_Norris Geyser Basin_ (7,527)--G-H: 6--For P. W. Norris, who first explored and described it, and opened it up to tourists. It was, however, discovered in 1872 by E. S. Topping and Dwight Woodruff, who were led in that direction by noticing from the summit of Bunsen Peak a vast column of steam ascending to the southward. The day after this discovery, a tourist party, including a Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Stone, of Bozeman, Montana, visited it from Mammoth Hot Springs, and then continued their course, by way of the general line of the present route, to the Firehole Geyser Basin. Mrs. Stone was the first white woman to visit the Park.
_Norris Pa.s.s_ (8,260)--M : 6--1879--Norris--For its discoverer.
_Raynolds Pa.s.s_ (6,911)--Not on map.--Crosses the Continental Divide to the northward of Henry Lake, and connects the valley of Henry Fork with that of the Madison. Named for Captain W. F. Raynolds, who led his expedition through it in 1860.
_Sylvan Pa.s.s_ (8,650)--L : 13--1895--U. S. G. S.--Characteristic.
_Targhee Pa.s.s_ (7,063)--Not on map.--Crosses the Continental Divide to the eastward of Henry Lake, and leads from the valley of Henry Fork to that of the Madison. The origin and orthography of this name are uncertain. In Hayden's Report for 1872, occur three spellings, Targhee, Tyghee, and Tahgee. The weight of evidence is in favor of the form here adopted. There was an impression among the Hayden Survey people, in 1872, that the name was given in honor of some distinguished Indian Chief; but that there was no definite information on the point is evident from the following statements, taken from Hayden's Report for 1872. On page 56, it is stated that _Tahgee_ Pa.s.s "was named years ago for the head chief of the Bannocks." On page 227, it is said that _Tyghee_ Pa.s.s "was named for an old Shoshone chief who was wont to use it." The real origin is thus left somewhat obscure, but it is probable that the notion that the pa.s.s was named for an Indian chief may have some foundation in fact. There was living among the Bannocks within the present memory of white men a chief whose name was p.r.o.nounced _Ti-gee_.