Fur Trader Nathaniel Wyeth Selects Old Fort Hall Site [otd 07/14]
On July 14, 1834, Captain Nathaniel J. Wyeth wrote in his journal: "Went down the river about 3 miles and found a location for a fort."This event occurred on Wyeth's second fur trading and trapping...
View ArticleNaturalist John Kirk Townsend Describes Fort Hall Area [otd 07/15]
Naturalist Townsend.Oregon Historical Society.On July 15, 1834, naturalist John Kirk Townsend described the site selected by Nathaniel Wyeth for the Fort Hall trading post [yesterday's blog].Townsend...
View ArticleTelegraph Line Links Eagle Rock (Idaho Falls) to the Outside World [otd 07/16]
On July 16, 1866, workers completed a new telegraph line from Utah into the stage stop at Taylor’s Bridge. Matt Taylor and has partners had received a franchise for their toll bridge from the...
View ArticleFur Trade and Real Estate Multimillionaire John Jacob Astor [otd 07/17]
J. J. Astor. Library of Congress.John Jacob Astor, who became America’s richest man, was born July 17, 1763 in Waldorf (near Heidelberg, Duchy of Baden, before the creation of Germany). He was born...
View ArticleTrappers Clash with Indians at the Battle of Pierre’s Hole [otd 07/18]
On July 18, the great mountain man rendezvous of 1832, at Pierre's Hole, was breaking up. The only Idaho location where the fur companies held their annual conclave, Pierre's Hole is known to us today...
View ArticleRailroad Town of Burley Incorporated [otd 7/19]
The town of Burley, Idaho, was incorporated on July 19, 1909. The village had grown explosively since being platted four years earlier, and many businesses supported the growing farm population. That...
View ArticlePoor Roads and Blistering Weather Hobble Traffic to the Idaho Gold Camps
On July 20, 1863, The Oregonian reported, “Increased facilities are offering daily for transportation to the Boise mines. We are informed that John Slavin & Co. have established a stage line to run...
View ArticleAmmunition Innovator and Manufacturer Richard, "Dick," Speer [otd 07/21]
Dick Speer.Beal & Wells photo.Lewiston industrialist Richard A. "Dick" Speer was born July 21, 1915 in Cedar Falls, Iowa. His father, who started out as a farmer and nurseryman, took up...
View ArticleArmy Establishes Fort Lapwai on the Nez Percé Indian Reservation [otd 07/22]
According to Idaho State Historical Society records, a troop of Oregon Volunteer cavalry established Camp – later Fort – Lapwai on July 22, 1862. The location selected was near the mission established...
View ArticleGambler Patterson Shoots and Kills Ex-Sheriff Pinkham [otd 07/23]
Sumner Pinkham.Idaho City Historical Foundation.On Sunday, July 23, 1865, businessman and ex-sheriff Sumner Pinkham took a hired carriage from Idaho City to a resort about two miles west of town....
View ArticleRailroad Begins Narrow Gauge Track Conversion in Eastern Idaho [otd 07/24]
On Sunday July 24, 1887, multiple crews assembled at intervals along the 262 miles of narrow-gauge track between Pocatello, Idaho and Garrison, Montana. They worked for the Utah & Northern Railroad...
View ArticleLong-Time U. S. Senator Frank Church [otd 07/25]
Senator Church. Library of Congress.U.S. Senator and third-generation Idahoan Frank Forrester Church was born July 25, 1924 in Boise. In 1942, he started school at Stanford University, but left to...
View ArticleReynolds Distributes First Issue of The Idaho Statesman, in Boise [otd 07/26]
Statesman inaugural issue.On Tuesday, July 26, 1864, the first issue of the Idaho Tri-Weekly Statesman, a small four-column publication, came off the presses in Boise City. The newspaper debuted that...
View ArticleMethodist Minister Performs First Religious Service in Idaho [otd 07/27]
Nathaniel J. Wyeth, 1840.Illustration for Harper’s Magazine,November 1892.On July 27, 1834, Captain Nathaniel J. Wyeth was working at his new Fort Hall site [blog, July 14]. In his Journal he recorded...
View ArticleCowboys Drive Cattle Across Idaho into Wyoming and Nevada [otd 07/28]
On July 28, 1876, cowboy cook William Emsley Jackson wrote in his diary, "Three emigrant teams passed us while in camp – are being rushed right along now. Five herds of cattle between here and...
View ArticleNewspaperwoman and Women’s Suffrage Advocate Abigail (Scott) Duniway [otd 07/29]
On July 29, 1852, Oregon Pioneer Abigail Jane Scott wrote in her party's journal, "Three miles brought us to Goose Creek; There is grass enough here for a small party of cattle; The water is not very...
View ArticleChief Pocatello Signs "Box Elder" Peace Treaty [otd 07/30]
On July 30, 1863, Shoshone Chief Pocatello signed the Treaty of Box Elder. In return for promises of food and other compensation for the game and land preempted by whites, the Chief agreed to cease his...
View ArticleGooding College President and Methodist Minister Charles Wesley Tenney [otd...
Charles Wesley Tenney, LL.D., was born in Vancouver, Washington on July 31, 1873. His father, Horace Dewey Tenney from Vermont, pioneered in Washington by way of California in 1863. Horace became a...
View ArticleColonel William Dewey: Mining Investor, Road Builder, and Business Developer...
Prominent Idaho pioneer Colonel William H. Dewey was born August 1, 1823 in Hampden County, Massachusetts (some sources give the birth year as 1822). Raised on a farm, he presumably followed that line...
View ArticleLewiston Newspaper Golden Age distributed Its First Issue [otd 08/02]
On Saturday, August 2, 1862, the Golden Age newspaper released its inaugural issue in Lewiston, Washington Territory. The Age thus has the honor of being the first newspaper published in what would...
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