This story is about places that intrigued me in my younger days and still do. Just wish I could go back and see some of them. Maybe some of you have seen some of these places.
HISTORIC CABINS & PLACES
A few years
back I bought a book titled UNCLE SAM’S CABINS by Les Joslin. It is a visitor’s guide to historic U.S.
Forest Service Ranger Stations of the west.
It has many pictures of old cabins used as ranger stations, guard
stations and pack stations, along with the history of these places. Some of these are no longer used by the
Forest Service, some are rented out to the public, others have fallen to
disrepair and some have been burned down.
Some of the older cabins were rustic, dating back to the early days of
the Forest Service when there was only a District Ranger, maybe his assistant
and a few seasonal fire guards all on horseback patrolling the forests from
these remote cabins.
I have seen
a few of these places in my travels, either while working for the Forest
Service or on my own. The Gold Beach
Ranger Station where I worked from 1979-88 is shown in the book with a short
story about its history along with the old station at Agness, 35 miles up the
Rogue River from Gold Beach. For
those of you familiar with the Tiller Ranger Station there is a good write up
on that place with pictures and many more.
There were
some Forest Service cabins in wilderness areas.
These cabins always intrigued me
as I would give thought of what it would be like to work out of one of these remote
places. When I worked as a seasonal recreational
aide on the Summit District of the Stanislaus National Forest in 1970 there
were three or four cabins along with corrals in the Emigrant Wilderness used by
wilderness rangers on horseback and trail crews. They were shown on Forest maps along with
the trails. When not occupied by Forest
Service personnel they were subject to vandalism by the public. There was a cabin in Marble Valley in the
middle of the Marble Mountain Wilderness, not sure it is still there. The Trinity Alps Wilderness had a few
cabins, some were used by livestock people who had grazing allotments and some
were private cabins on mining claims. Most
of these cabins in the Trinity Alps were not shown on maps, except for an old
abandoned pack station, called Trinity Summit Guard Station. Not sure how many of these cabins still
exist. One of the most classic
wilderness ranger stations is the Moose Creek Ranger Station in the middle of
the Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness in Idaho.
Never have been there.
Another good
book about the early settlements in the Rogue River Canyon is ILLAHE by Kay
Atwood. There are many pictures and
maps of old miner’s cabins, trails and small farms where early pioneers
scratched out a living in what is now the Wild Rogue River Wilderness. Stories of bachelor miners living off venison,
beans, coffee and tobacco in their one room cabins up some dry gulch off the
beaten trail. Some of these original
pioneers came from the Klamath River area over the Siskiyou Mountains ending up
at the confluence of the Illinois River and Rogue River near the present day
community of Agness. Some of these
cabins have been preserved including the Billings Ranch at Mule Creek.
The Bohemia
Mining District on the Cottage Grove District of the Umpqua National Forest is
a unique area to explore. Many of the buildings
are gone, except for the old post office building as I remember. There are still some working mines in the
vicinity. The Musick Guard Station was
constructed in 1934 by the Civilian Conservation Corp to provide fire
protection and maintenance of trails in the mining district. It has been preserved and is available for
the public to rent.
During the
winter of 1972, while working on the Orleans Ranger District a co-worker and I
drove up to the Red River Ranger Station on the Nez Perce National Forest in
Idaho to look at a job opening there.
The nearest town was Elk City, 13 miles away with a population of
200. There was a foot of snow on the
ground, it was cold and desolate. It
made Orleans look civilized. Neither
one of us applied for the job. The Red
River Station closed in 1998 and was consolidated with the Elk City Ranger
Station. Always have to wonder where
life would have taken me if I ended up there?
No comments:
Post a Comment