|

Wildlife has played an important role in the history of Jackson Hole. The abundant wildlife lured early explorers to the valley. The Native Americans came to hunt buffalo and other large game, and the first European and American visitors came to collect beaver pelts. Before 1800, the only people who traveled into Jackson Hole were the Native American tribes who spent the summer months hunting the wildlife in the valley and the area surrounding it. Among the tribes that trailed through the valley were the Shoshone, Crow, Blackfeet, Bannock, and Gros Ventre. These early visitors to Jackson Hole left behind evidence of their practices and culture.
Present day history scholars enjoy discovering these artifacts in the hidden spots of the valley, and the Jackson Hole Historical Society & Museum share the results of their efforts with the public. In 1803, Thomas Jefferson organized
the Lewis and Clark Corps of Discovery expedition to explore
the unknown territory of the Louisiana Purchase. The expedition
traveled up the Missouri River and crossed the Rocky Mountains far to the north of Wyoming, in Montana, on their trip to the Pacific Ocean. During the return journey in 1806, John Colter, one of the members of the Expedition, headed back into the mountains to scout for a fur trading company. On a trip to the Crow, Colter probably entered Jackson Hole in the winter of 1807-8. He traveled into Crow territory to persuade them to trap for valuable beaver pelts, which were used for the fashionable hats of the era.
When other trappers followed Colter’s example, Jackson Hole became one of the prime areas of interest. Most of the famous mountain men that trapped in the
West in the early 1800’s traveled the trails that crossed the valley: Jim Bridger, Jedediah Smith, William Sublette, and David Jackson were among them. They traveled through the area going to and from the annual summer Rendezvous
where they traded their beaver pelts and celebrated a successful trapping season. But it was David Jackson who gave his name to the valley when he supposedly spent the winter of 1829 on the shores of Jackson Lake. For the mountain
men, a “hole” indicated a high valley that was surrounded by mountains, William Sublette, who was Jackson’s partner in an early fur company, referred to the mountain valley along the
Snake River as Jackson’s Hole. The mountain men were responsible for many, if not most, of the names in the valley. It was French Canadian trappers who named the three prominent peaks of the area “Les Trois Tetons,” or the three breasts: Grand Teton, Middle
Teton, and South Teton.
By 1845 the fur trade had drawn to a close because the silk hat had replaced the one made of beaver felt. Then, Jackson Hole reverted to the summer habitation of various
Indian tribes and an occasional government expedition. The Hayden Surveys of 1871, 1872, and 1878 officially named many of the important landmarks. Leigh Lake and Jenny Lake were named in honor of the guide for the 1872 expedition-- Richard“Beaver Dick” Leigh. Beaver Dick was one of the last of the mountain man trappers who lived in the valley. Jenny Lake was named for his wife, a Shoshone woman, and Leigh Lake was named for Beaver Dick himself.
As a part of the Hayden Expedition of 1871 and 1872, William
Henry Jackson took the first photographs
of the Teton Mountains and Yellowstone. His photographs were important evidence to help convince the federal government, in 1872, to protect the Yellowstone area as the world’s first national park.
After the creation of Yellowstone, big game hunters and the first “dudes,” including foreign royalty, visited the area. Again the abundant wildlife brought people and helped to spread the fame of beautiful Jackson Hole. Since wildlife flourished in the
valley, settlers hoped that domestic animals would flourish as well.
By the late 1880’s, they began to trail into
the “Hole.”Some of them followed the Gros Ventre River into
the valley, and a brave few cleared a wagon route over Teton Pass, following
the trail of Indians and mountain men. By the 1890’s, the villages
of Kelly, Wilson, and Moran had been born. In 1892, two years after Wyoming
became a state, Bill Menor moved into Jackson Hole, the first settler west
of the Snake River. He established a ferry that remained for many years
the only dry way to get across the Snake River. His cabin, in what is now
Grand Teton National Park, has been preserved to house artifacts of the
early settlers in Jackson Hole.
In the 1890’s, cattle ranching became the major focus of the area, and
with cattle ranching came a larger and more permanent settlement. The town of
Jackson was named in 1894 and acquired a plan for streets and major buildings
in 1900. Some of the buildings and houses of that early era remain a part of
Jackson today. The present day visitor can find them around the Town Square and
along the streets to the south of the square. The wooden sidewalks that surround
Town Square are maintained in special commemoration of the valley’s colorful
history, and the elk antler arches on the square itself celebrate the magnificent
wildlife of the area. Concern for wintering elk began early in Jackson Hole.
The severe winter of 1908-9 brought the concern to a head; thousands of elk were
starving in the valley.
The townspeople, with the help of the state of Wyoming, bought hay to help the
animals through the winter, but the following winter was no better. Through the
crusading efforts of Stephen Leek and his photographs, the U.S. Biological Survey
Elk Refuge was established in 1912 with an allotment of one thousand acres. Today
the National Elk Refuge, the direct descendant of the original refuge, contains
nearly 25,000 acres and feeds over 7,000 elk every winter.
Women in Wyoming have been voting since 1869, when
the legislature of Wyoming Territory met for the first time, the first
government in the world to grant women full voting rights. But in 1920,
the year the 19th Amendment
to the U.S. Constitution gave women across the nation the right to vote, Jackson
added to its legendary history by electing an all-female city council, the
first anywhere in the United States. The elected women of Jackson proved their
mettle by increasing the town treasury, improving the water system, getting
rid of the garbage in the streets, grading the roads, and beautifying the cemetery,
a very ambitious agenda. In 1929, Grand Teton National Park was created and
dedicated. The park at that time included the mountains in the Teton Range
and a narrow strip of land that contained the major lakes at the base of the
peaks. But that was enough to develop the tourism industry, which has now replaced
cattle ranching as the primary economic base of Jackson Hole. In 1950, the
park was enlarged to include the Jackson Hole National Monument, established
in 1943. The rededicated park contains 52 square miles, acquired by John D.
Rockefeller, Jr., during the 1930’s and 40’s. Grand Teton National
Park
now totals 485 square miles or 310,000 acres.
As the fame of Jackson Hole with its beautiful scenery and
fascinating wildlife grew, more and more visitors found their
way into the valley. The mild summers added river rafting and
hiking and horseback riding to the allure of hunting and fishing
in the valley. In 1937, valley residents built a ski tow at Teton
Pass and winter sports were added to the valley’s charm for visitors.
In 1939, Snow King Resort, on the mountain above the town
of Jackson, was the first ski facility in the state of Wyoming.
Today three major ski areas have made Jackson Hole world
famous for excellent skiing and winter sports. At the Jackson
Hole Mountain Resort, Rendezvous Peak has the largest verticalrise served by
one lift system in the country at 4,139 feet above Teton Village. Grand Targhee
Ski and Summer Resort, near theIdaho border, is famous for its deep and plentiful
powder snow, and Snow King Resort serves locals and tourists alike with the
valley’s only night skiing.
Courtesy of Jackson Hole Chamber of Commerce
© 2008 WindRiverCountry.com
|