Monday, August 16, 2010

Sunrise Mine Presentation

The Osher Lifelong Learning Center at Casper College will be hosting a presentation on the historic Sunrise Mine and its community. The presentation, by AHW's Mary Humstone and former Sunrise resident, Sophia Beck, will focus on economic and social issues regarding the mine itself and the company town that surrounded it. The presentation will take place from 2-3:30PM in EL100.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Support the Historic Preservation Fund

As the cornerstone of the federal historic preservation program, the Historic Preservation Fund (HPF) provides grants to states, tribes, and local governments to use for activities like education, preparation of National Register nominations, and development of comprehensive preservation plans. The HPF also provides critical bricks and mortar grants to historic sites and collection through the Save America’s Treasures program.

While federal law authorizes up to $150 million annually for the HPF, for decades, core historic preservation programs have only received one third to one half of that authorized annual amount, which hampers all our efforts to achieve the lofty goals set out in the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966.

WHAT YOU CAN DO

On Wednesday, July 14th, the House Committee on Natural Resources will consider H.R. 3534 – the Consolidated Land, Energy, and Aquatic Resources (CLEAR) Act of 2009. The discussion draft of the bill includes language that would fully fund the Historic Preservation Fund.

Members of the Natural Resources Committee need to hear from the preservation community. Please contact your member today and ask them to include language for fully funding the HPF in the final version of the House Bill.

Monday, July 12, 2010

BLM to host open houses on scenic values

The Bureau of Land Management is hosting five open houses to discuss the scenic values of our public lands and to help them understand which lands the public especially prizes for their scenic values. Of course, all lands have a certain scenic value but we all know that some are more important than others. For history buffs, the historic trails have their own special needs when it comes to protecting scenic values. You may be able to stand in the ruts of the old trails but if there is a wind turbine ten feet from you, dominating the view, you're not going to have the same experience that you will if the landscape is virtually undisturbed. This is usually referred to as the "viewshed" and it is something that AHW works hard to protect. Natural landmarks often require an undisturbed landscape to properly appreciate. And, of course, there are simply lands that are so breathtaking, none of us would want to see them trampled by industrialization.

The BLM Rock Springs and Rawlins Offices will use these public meetings to gather information for their Visual Resource Management System which assists the BLM in quantifying existing values, establishing goals and objectives and utilizing that information to determine whether a proposed activity conforms to the established goals and objectives. The BLM will be looking to the public at these meetings for input on what the public wants from their scenic lands across the southern tier of the state. All together, the Rock Springs and Rawlins BLM offices manage more than 7 million acres of lands in Carbon, Albany, Laramie, Sweetwater, Uinta, Lincoln, Fremont, and Sublette Counties.

We strongly encourage you to attend these open houses and let your voice be heard about the scenic values that you cherish on these public lands. The meetings will be held from 4-7:30PM at the following locations:

Monday, July 12, Baggs, Little Snake River Valley Ed Center, 360 Whipporwill
Tuesday, July 13, Rawlins, Jeffrey Memorial Community Center, 315 East Pine
Wednesday, July 14, Rock Springs, Western Wyoming Community College, 2500 College Drive, Room 1302
Monday, July 19, Saratoga, Platte Valley Community Center, 210 Elm Street
Tuesday, July 20, Laramie, Albany County Library, 310 South 8th St.

For more information, contact Sherry Roche, Project Manager for the BLM, at (307) 775-6484

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Job Opening with AHW

JOB ANNOUNCEMENT - EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

Alliance for Historic Wyoming, a leading voice for the protection of Wyoming's built environment and cultural landscapes, seeks a part-time Executive Director to implement its strategic goals and objectives. We seek an intelligent, self-motivated individual with a familiarity with historic preservation, whose critical analysis, fundraising, and grassroots organizing will advance our mission and build our organization. If you want meaningful, challenging work exercising your leadership and education to save our cultural heritage, this job is for you!

DESCRIPTION

The Executive Director will work with the Board of Directors to fulfill its governance function and AHW's annual objectives. This position will start at 20 hours per week at $17 per hour and will be the first employee of the organization. This role is intended to increase over time with the successful applicant. Location anywhere in the state of Wyoming is acceptable; extensive travel throughout the state is required. Must be able to work from a home office initially; successful fundraising may later make an office available.

DUTIES

  • Supporting operation of Board by advising and informing board members and attending quarterly Board meetings either in person or by phone.
  • Overseeing design and execution of programs and services, including evaluating and critiquing projects on public lands which may impact Wyoming historic sites or cultural landscapes; working cooperatively with other groups to build coalitions and further preservation efforts; educating stakeholders and energizing the grassroots to take action to protect priority endangered sites; responding to requests for assistance with preservation projects in accordance with AHW’s intervention policy.
  • Recommending annual budget to the board for approval and prudently overseeing AHW resources within budget guidelines and the law.
  • Managing grants.
  • Managing volunteers and any future employees in accordance with policy and the law.
  • Assuring that AHW, its mission, program and services are consistently presented in a strong, positive light to all its current and potential stakeholders, including serving as a media spokesperson for AHW, writing press releases and opinion-editorial pieces, and performing interviews.
  • Overseeing fundraising planning and implementation, including identifying needs, developing a fundraising plan for the board, researching funding sources, establishing strategies to approach current and potential funders, submitting grant proposals, developing membership, carefully stewarding resources, and administering records.
  • Maintaining files and performing clerical duties as necessary.
  • Traveling to meetings and conferences.

DESIRED QUALITIES

The successful applicant will have a suite of important qualities including some combination of the following:

  • ability to create and execute a work plan from idea to fruition with little supervision
  • confidence in commenting on federal projects that impact historic resources
  • experience with grassroots activism in small towns and rural communities
  • personal commitment to saving sites of cultural and historic import
  • quality writing and research skills
  • strong intellect, creativity, drive and initiative
  • ability to track and meet multiple deadlines and responsibilities
  • proficiency with technology, including database, power point, online research, basic general computer maintenance, and word processing
  • flexible schedule and willingness to travel

DIRECTION

This position reports to the Board of directors.

APPLICATION PROCEDURES

Submit a cover letter, writing sample, resume and three professional references to Sarah Egolf, sarah (dot) egolf (at) gmail (dot) com, Alliance for Historic Wyoming, 1036 Monte Vista Drive, Casper, WY 82601 by September 1, 2010 Email submissions preferred.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Barn Lecture in Jackson, June 21, 6PM

OCTA-AHW at South Pass


AHW board members Barbara Dobos and Tom Rea spent the afternoon of Monday, June 14, at South Pass with stalwarts from the national Oregon-California Trails Association. The OCTA people were on hand to scout locations from which to shoot footage that will be used in promotional videos; Dobos and Rea talked at length with them about ways OCTA, the alliance, and other conservation and history-minded groups might collaborate in the coming months as the Bureau of Land Management revises its Resource Management Plan for the Lander, Wyoming Field Office. This BLM field office contains the most historic and scenic stretch of the Oregon-California-Mormon Trail anywhere. All agreed that the more people the agency hears from who value the trail, the better.

We drove to the top of Pacific Butte, which afforded spectacular views of the whole South Pass area, from Oregon Buttes to the top of the Wind Rivers, and from Pacific Springs as far east as Burnt Ranch.

Clockwise from top right: OCTA Director Travis Boley; Dobos; Elk on Pacific Butte; the Wind River Range; Rea; Salt Lake City historian and Oregon Trail scholar Will Bagley; and, at the monument Ezra Meeker erected at South Pass in 1906, national OCTA board member John Krizek, of Prescott, AZ.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Community Meetings for Tourism Master Plan

Wyoming Travel & Tourism, Wyoming Game and Fish and Wyoming State Parks and Cultural Resources are collaborating on creating a comprehensive statewide Tourism Master Plan for Wyoming. In an effort to garner as much input from as many residents and stakeholders as possible, they will host seven community meetings across the state. Many of you will want to attend the meeting scheduled to be held in your area. The public's input will be important in helping to make this plan as thorough as possible. We would also encourage you to pass this information on to others who may be interested in taking part in these meetings.

The meeting dates and locations are as follows. Each meeting will be held from 10 am to 3 pm and include a working lunch.

May 3rd— Cody, Buffalo Bill Historical Center, 720 Sheridan Ave.
May 4th— Riverton, Sundowner Station, 1616 Federal Blvd
May 5th— Jackson, Teton Science Building, 700 Coyote Canyon Rd
May 6th— Rock Springs, BLM Field Office, 280 N. Hwy 191
May 19th— Laramie, Hilton Garden Inn, 2229 Grand Ave
May 20th— Douglas, Eastern Wyoming College, 203 N. 6th St.
May 21st— Gillette, Campbell County Rec Center, 250 Shoshone Ave


The Master Plan website is available here. The website is a great resource to bring you up to speed on the purpose and goals of the master plan. On the community meeting page of this site, there is also a link to an agenda that will be used for each meeting.

If you would like to RSVP for one of the meetings above, please contact Vicki Morris by email or call 307-777-2828. You can also call Vicki if you have questions.

Email notification originally distributed by:

Alan Dubberley, Deputy Director
Wyoming Travel & Tourism
Office: 307-777-8561
Mobile: 307-214-1530
Alan.dubberley@visitwyo.gov

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Help Save LaPrele Guard Station


Help Us Save the Historic La Prele Guard Station!


Who? We need volunteers like you for a one-week interior rebilitation project to restore the dwelling for continued use as a rental facility available to the recreating public.

What? A volunteer-based project led by HistoriCorps instructors designed to optimise preservation trades learning opportunties. Participants will learn to repair and install tile, repair and refinish historic woodwork, and replace kitchen and bathroom flooring.

Where? The La Prele Work Center is located in the La Prele Creek drainage on the southwestern slopes of the Laramie Range in southern Wyoming. The site is accessible by passenger vehicle. The address is: La Prele Guard Station (WY) 2250 E. RICHARDS, Douglas WY 82366.

When? 9am May 24, 2010 – 12noon May 28, 2010

Why?
Because learning preservation trades in scenic Wyoming sounds like fun to me!

How much does it cost? Nothing! This project is free to all participants. Additionally, meals, tools, and safety equipment will be provided.

Additional Information: The project will be managed and supervised an experienced Western Wyoming outfitter, Dirk Jenkins, with a HistoriCorps instructor assisting the leadership. The construction team will include between six and eight members. Previous construction experience is not required. Tools, safety equipment, meals, and lodging at the La Prele Guard House will be provided by HistoriCorps but transportation to and from the project is the responsibility of the participant. All crew members must be physically fit and be willing to work long days in variable weather.

Contact
info@historicorps.org or visit www.historicorps.org for additional information.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Wind Energy Conversation

CHEYENNE, Wyo. – Wind projects and power transmission lines are the topics for a question and answer session in Douglas with Governor Dave Freudenthal later this month. The “community conversation” on wind development and electrical transmission line siting will begin at 6 p.m. on Tuesday evening, April 27, 2010, at the Douglas High School Auditorium.

“I’ll be there to hear from people and to answer questions,” Freudenthal said. “There is a lot happening with wind development in Wyoming, and I want to hear what people have to say.”

“These are complicated subjects, and folks are entitled to a straightforward conversation on what we can all agree are difficult, sometimes polarizing issues, related to wind development opportunities and electrical transmission line siting,” Freudenthal said. “People need to know where the State stands on a whole range of issues relating to wind power and electrical transmission, ranging from sage grouse to property rights.”

Some developers say Wyoming is “anti-wind,” Freudenthal said. On the other hand, some property owners are concerned about private property rights in the face of wind-related development.

“Let’s get together and talk about it,” Freudenthal said. “Maybe we can ask the lobbyists and hired guns to take a seat in the back row, and let the other folks have their say.”
The Douglas “community conversation” is the first of several that the governor is expected to host this year. Other local meetings on wind development and power line siting issues are being planned for later this spring and summer.

Contact: Press Secretary Leigh Anne G. Manlove
Phone: 307.777.7437
Mobile: 307.421.0197
E-mail: lmanlo@state.wy.us

WY State Historical Society Award Programs

The Wyoming State Historical Society (WSHS) seeks nominations for two prestigious awards in honor of historic preservation activities in your community. The first is the Maurine Carley Memorial Award made to an organization or an individual in recognition of an outstanding project in the field of historic preservation. A historic preservation project may span many years, and people are encouraged to submit projects that may represent Wyoming’s diverse cultural heritage. Projects may be underway or shall have been completed within the last two years of being nominated. Possible nominations may include residential, commercial, public, religious, industrial or institutional buildings, historic sites, trails, cemeteries, archaeological sites and other places significant to Wyoming history.

Second is the Outstanding Preservation Project Award that goes to an organization or an individual in recognition of an outstanding project in the field of historic preservation that does not focus on the physical preservation of an historic building or site. Projects eligible for the OPPA are those that focus on the preservation of objects or items such as photographs, documents, films or books significant to Wyoming history. For example, the preservation of historic photographic plates may qualify for this award. On the other hand, the preservation of equipment or tools may also qualify for the award, such as the restoration of an historic wagon.

Applications can be obtained by calling John Waggener at 307-766-2563, via e-mail waggener@uwyo.edu, or by logging onto the Society’s website at www.wyshs.org and clicking the link titled “Awards.” Nominations for these two awards go directly to John Waggener, American Heritage Center, University of Wyoming, 1000 E. University Ave. Dept. 3924, Laramie, WY 82071 and must be received by April 30th.

Friday, April 2, 2010

Scoping Meeting on Bates Hole Travel Management

On April 15, 2010, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) Casper Field Office is hosting a public scoping meeting on the Bates Hole Travel Management Plan. The meeting is from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at the Casper Field Office, 2987 Prospector Drive.

The plan will address off-highway vehicle use and the designation of roads and trails within the Bates Hole travel management area which is located 15 miles southwest of Casper and south of Wyoming Highway 220.

The scoping meeting is a starting point for the public to identify issues that BLM will address in the environmental assessment. Issues already identified include mitigating impacts to vegetation, sensitive soils, and wildlife habitats from off-road motorized use. The BLM recognizes the need to maintain valid and existing rights for minerals and rights-of way
owners. In the past, the public had expressed the need for additional transportation routes and motorized and non-motorized recreational use.

BLM will accept public comments through May 17, 2010. Please address questions, comments, or concerns to the Casper Field Office, Bureau of Land Management, Attn: Kathleen Lacko, 2987 Prospector Drive, Casper, Wyo., 82604; by facsimile (fax) to (307)261-7587; or send e-mail comments to the attention of Kathleen Lacko at casper_wymail@blm.gov. Please include “Bates Hole” in the subject line. To make comments on the plan itself, please go to the Bates Hole Travel Management Plan on the internet.

For more information contact Kathleen Lacko at 307-261-7682.

Monday, March 29, 2010

Job Opportunity

Program Associate, Public Lands Policy
Posted March 22, 2010

Position Details

Type: Full Time
Offered By: National Trust for Historic Preservation, Office of Public Policy, Washington, DC
Salary: Exemp

For More Information
50459-CS-815@nthp.hrmdirect.com

Coordinate federal public lands policy agenda to protect and fund historic and cultural resources on lands managed by the federal land managing agencies with an emphasis on the Bureau of Land Management and the National Landscape Conservation System. Work closely with Program Manager for Public Lands Policy in Washington, DC and with the Mountains/Plains regional office and the Law Department. The position is located in the Public Policy Office, reports to the Program Manager for Public Lands Policy and coordinates all Congressional work with the Director of Congressional Affairs.

This is a full time, grant funded position eligible for benefits. Filling of this position will be subject to receipt of the initial grant, and then continuation of the position will be contingent upon annual renewal of funding.

Duties
  • Educate Congress and the Administration on the need to preserve and fund historic and cultural resources on lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management with an emphasis on the National Landscape Conservation System.
  • Advocate for expansion, improved management and increased funding (including budget clarity) of the National Landscape Conservation System. Work closely with other organizations supporting the National Landscape Conservation System and co-lead efforts to increase funding for the Conservation System.
  • Work with National Trust's Public Lands Team to continue the cultivation and support of the Cultural Resources Preservation Coalition, and provide general support for overall Public Lands Team goals as assigned.
Qualifications
  • Minimum of two years of Congressional legislative or advocacy experience.
  • Ability to work well with a team and with a diverse network of organizations.
  • Strong written and public communications skills required.
  • Willingness and flexibility to travel.
  • Experience with and knowledge of public lands issues strongly preferred.
How to Apply

To apply please include your cover letter in the body of a message and email your resume as a Word of PDF attachment to 50459-CS-815@nthp.hrmdirect.com

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Looking for Old Barns

American History magazine has a back-page department entitled "Save This Old Barn." The feature is used to showcase historic American barns in need of saving -- barns that may otherwise fall down, be torn down, etc. The owner of these old barns must be willing to donate them to someone willing to move and restore them. The page itself has a photo of the barn, historic details, the barn's location, the $1 asking price and the owner's contact information. Interested parties would then contact the owner directly.

The Alliance for Historic Wyoming has been asked to distribute this information to any barn owners who might be interested in participating in this project. If you have such a barn or know someone who might, please get in touch with the contact information below. This is an on-going project of American History magazine so no deadline.

For more info, contact:
Lora Homeyer
American History magazine
Weider History Group
703-779-8370

Ames Monument Talk

WESTERNERS INTERNATIONAL, CHEYENNE CORRAL
Thursday, April 15, 2010

“The Lonely Pyramid on Sherman Hill"
ANNA LEE AMES FROHLICH


This is a look at the 60-foot-high Ames Monument located in what was once Sherman, WY. This slideshow will explore the history of the monument itself, the area where it is located, and the family history of Oakes and Oliver Ames to whom it is dedicated. Their stories tell of a great construction project that shaped the future history of our country, the transcontinental railroad. Oliver Ames was the president of the Union Pacific Railroad from 1866 to 1871; Oakes Ames was a strong advocate for the Union Pacific in Congress from 1863 to 1873. Their combined efforts culminated in the driving of the Golden Spike at Promontory Point, Utah in 1869.

Anna Lee Ames Frohlich, the Great-great-great-granddaughter of Oakes Ames, is loving her recently found role as a researcher. She has been encouraged and helped by friends in Denver Westerners, railroad aficionados from Wyoming, and the many other history buffs that she has met along the way. Access to the Ames Collection in the Industrial Department at Stonehill College, North Easton, MA has been of special help.

The dinner and program will be held at HOLIDAY INN, CHEYENNE I-80. From the junction of I-80 and I-25 in Cheyenne, WY take I-80W to the EAST toward Omaha, take Exit #362 (Central Ave.) make Right, then Right on Fox Farm Road. Hotel on Right. 1-307-638-4466.

COST - $20.00
6:00 P.M. - SOCIAL HOUR & COCKTAILS
6:30 - DINNER
7:20 - PROGRAM

RSVP by Mon., April 12

To make RESERVATIONS call Anna Lee at 303-989-2339 (answering machine o.k.) or email her at annaleeames@comcast.net. Specify whether you would like TROUT ALMANDINE or MEAT LASAGNA for dinner. Or you can email Peg Kolstrud at bear100@bresnan.net and specify that you are Anna Lee's guest.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Lander BLM to host RMP Open House

BLM Hosts Open House for Lander
Resource Management Plan

The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) Lander Field Office will host an open house on Wednesday, March 31, from 4-7 p.m., at the Carnegie Room in the Fremont County Library in Lander.

The open house will provide the public an opportunity to meet the BLM employees who are working with cooperating state and local agencies to develop a revised Resource Management Plan (RMP) for public lands in the Lander Field Office area. This RMP will govern how the Greater South Pass Historic Landscape is managed for years to come.

BLM and cooperating agencies have been working together on this project for the past two years. Public input, provided at meetings and through written comments, has been integral to the process. To keep the public informed, the field office website is updated with reports and summaries produced throughout the RMP process.

The Fremont County Library is located at 200 Amoretti Street in Lander. For more information, please contact RMP Project Lead Kristin Yannone at 307-332-8400. Visit the Lander website for the most current RMP information.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Conservation easements

One of my students posted this on our course website. Note the "project sponsors" at the end of the article. I assume this was a mitigation project, although they don't come out and say it. Is anyone familiar with the Wyoming Landscape Conservation Initiative? Is this the state chapter of the national initiative that we're involved in?

Diamond H Ranch donates easement
By JEFF GEARINO - Southwest Wyoming bureau | Posted: Thursday, February 25, 2010

GREEN RIVER -- A portion of a century-old cattle ranch in southwest Wyoming will be preserved under a conservation easement, according to Wyoming Game and Fish Department officials.

Green River Regional Office spokeswoman Lucy Wold said the department worked with a variety of partners to secure a 2,400-acre conservation easement with the Diamond H Ranch located near Kemmerer in Lincoln County. The commercial Hereford cattle ranch is owned by Myles, Corby, Michael and Rachel McGinnis.

The Diamond H Ranch dates back to 1886 and includes 7,200 deeded acres and 110,000 acres of leases on Bureau of Land Management and National Forest lands.
Game and Fish habitat biologist Ron Lockwood said discussions with the ranch owners about the easement had been ongoing since 2008.

He said the easement -- which holds several permanent streams that support populations of various fish species including Colorado River cutthroat trout -- should protect multiple wildlife habitats and will benefit many wildlife species.
"The Diamond H has important conservation values with unique topographic formations and open scenic vistas of great importance to the local ranching community and the public," Lockwood said this week in a media release. The easement acreage includes crucial winter range and yearlong range for elk, deer, moose, sage grouse and antelope.

Lockwood said the agency has also documented antelope movement through the area to summer ranges to the north, making the easement an important migration corridor.
He said the easement is particularly important because lands directly adjacent to the property are being subdivided for other uses. "This conservation easement will secure long-term protection of these habitats from subdivision and will ensure a viable livestock operation and wildlife habitat in the future," he said.

Landowner award
Lockwood said the McGinnis family and the Diamond H Ranch were the recipients of the Game and Fish's 2009 Landowner of the Year Award for the Green River region.
He said Corby McGinnis also serves as the chairperson for the Southwest Sage Grouse Working Group. "The McGinnises have a full understanding that conserving and enhancing all habitats benefit not only wildlife, but their ranching operation as well," Lockwood said. He noted although public access was not included in the conservation easement, which is generally the case for this type of easement, hunting and fishing on the Diamond H Ranch is allowed with landowner permission.

Other project partners include the Jonah Interagency Reclamation and Mitigation Office, the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, The Conservation Fund, the Wyoming Wildlife and Natural Resource Trust Fund, the Wyoming Landscape Conservation Initiative, the Game and Fish Habitat Trust Fund, the Wyoming Governor's Big Game License Coalition, and the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Women's History Month at Trails Center

On March 9, the National Historic Trails Interpretive Center (NHTIC) will celebrate Women’s History month with the opening of a temporary exhibit,“In Pursuit of Equality,” on loan from the American Heritage Center.

This exhibit tells the story of three women who, through their actions as elected office holders, challenged and changed the conventional understanding of equality in Wyoming during the 20th century: Nellie Tayloe Ross, Thyra Thomson, and Elizabeth Byrd.

Wyoming is a state with a long history of equality. In 1869, Governor John Campbell signed into law a bill giving women the right to vote and hold elective office. The following year Esther Hobart Morris was appointed the first female Justice of the Peace in South Pass City. In 1894, Estelle Reel was the first woman in America elected to a statewide office, as Wyoming’s Superintendant of Public Instruction. By the turn of the century Wyoming was recognized as the Equality State due in large part to these and other important historical firsts.

The legacy continued in 1925 with the election of Nellie Tayloe Ross (featured in the exhibit) as Wyoming’s 13th governor and the first woman governor in the United States. She held office until being narrowly defeated in the election of 1926.

Nearly 40 years after the successful election of Mrs. Ross, Thrya Thomson ran for Wyoming’s Secretary of State. Mrs. Thompson was successfully reelected five times to office. While in office, Mrs. Thompson successfully pursued the ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment in the Wyoming Senate in 1973.

The third influential woman featured in the exhibit, Elizabeth Byrd, was the first African-American to serve in the Wyoming Legislature. Mrs. Byrd worked diligently for Martin Luther King Jr. Day to be recognized, as well as aiding in the passing of laws to enforce child safety restraints, provide handicapped parking, and create social services for adults.

The exhibit will be on display from March 9, 2010 through early April 2010.

For further information please contact the NHTIC at (307) 261-7780.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Pony Express Program

On March 6, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) National Historic Trails
Interpretive Center (NHTIC) will present “The Pony Express: Truth vs.
Myth." The program will be held at the NHTIC beginning at 1 p.m. and is
free and open to the public.

Few events in U.S. western history have generated more myths and half
truths than the Pony Express. National Pony Express Association President
(NPEA) and rider Les Bennington will share and unravel some of these truths
from the myths. Bennington currently resides near Glenrock, Wyo.

The NPEA is also celebrating their sesquicentennial this year. Bennington
will share and elaborate on upcoming events associated with the 150th
anniversary of the Pony Express.

The Pony Express, a fast-moving mail service, operated from April 1860 to
November 1861. The Pony Express Trail crossed the North American continent
from Saint Joseph, Mo., to Sacramento, Calif.

Approximately 190 stations were placed between 10 and 12 miles apart along
the Pony Express Trail. The Pony Express operated a relay station at the
site of the Guinard Bridge and Trading Post, which later was established as
Platte Bridge Station, and then Fort Caspar.

For more information about the program, contact Jason Vlcan at the NHTIC,
(307) 261-7780.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Rock Springs BLM to hold open house

The Bureau of Land Management, Rock Springs Field Office, will be holding two public meetings on Wednesday, February 24, to discuss the proposed White Mountain Wind Energy Project. The project, spearheaded by Tasco Engineering, proposes to construct up to 240 wind turbines on top of White Mountain as part of a 360-megawatt electrical generating facility. Project costs could reach $200 million. If costs exceed $170 million, review by the Wyoming Industrial Siting Council would be triggered.

White Mountain is a popular recreation area located near Rock Springs and Green River, just north of Interstate 80. The project area would impact a number of significant cultural resource sites, including the Overland Trail, the North Cherokee Trail, Pilot Butte which has guided thousands of travelers through centuries of migration, significant Native American cultural sites, and historic wagon roads from early settlement days. The BLM is currently examining whether the area qualifies for the National Register as either a Rural Historic Landscape or a Traditional Cultural Property. The mountain is also home to elk, deer, wild horses, sage grouse and other species. The area also includes the recently developed Wild Horse Loop which runs along the rim and slope of White Mountain. In all, the proposed project area includes approximately 13,165 acres includes about 8,527 acres of lands privately owned by Anadarko and the Rock Springs Grazing Association.

The public meetings will be held at the Young at Heart Senior Center, 2400 Reagan Ave. in Rock Springs, Wyo. Two sessions are scheduled, the first beginning at 4 p.m.; the second session at 6 p.m. Each session will include a short presentation on the proposal with the rest of the time being available for questions and public comments. Project team members will be available after 3:30 p.m. to answer questions.

The recently released Environmental Assessment (EA) can be reviewed online here. Public comments will be accepted on the proposal until March 10. People attending the public sessions can turn in their comments there. Otherwise, they can be sent via email or by surface mail to Bureau of Land Management, Rock Springs Field Office, Attn: White Mountain Wind Energy Project, 280 Highway 191 North, Rock Springs, WY 82901.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

If we want jobs, try historic preservation

In his “State of the State” address last week, Governor Freudenthal called on the legislature to provide more funds for new school construction, stating that it was “about the only thing that is going to generate jobs in this state for construction.” Unfortunately, the governor and other state officials do not seem to be aware of the fact that new construction generates far fewer jobs than rehabilitation of existing buildings. In our haste to build new schools, we have not only destroyed some treasured community landmarks – we have also lost an opportunity to create many more new jobs than with new construction, and have needlessly wasted resources and overloaded our landfills.

Look at a few of these statistics:

• One million dollars spent on rehabilitation, compared to the same amount spent on new construction yields between 5 and 9 more local construction jobs, creates 4.7 more new jobs elsewhere in the community and provides $107,000 more in community income. It also generates $34,000 more in retail sales. (Advisory Council on Historic Preservation)

• At the state level, one million spent on building rehabilitation created:
5 more jobs than $1 million manufacturing electronic equipment in California.
12 more jobs than $1 million manufacturing cars in Michigan.
29 more jobs than pumping $1 million worth of oil in Oklahoma.
22 more jobs than $1 million cutting timber in Oregon.
12 more jobs than $1 million processing steel in Pennsylvania.
8 more jobs than $1 million manufacturing textiles in South Carolina.
17 more jobs than $1 million in agriculture in South Dakota.
20 more jobs than $1 million mining coal in West Virginia.
(Donovan Rypkema, the Economics of Historic Preservation)

If we focused on rehabilitating our existing schools (and other public buildings), we would not only create more construction jobs, we would give our communities the stability that comes from shared experiences through generations.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Another Letter Supporting South Pass

Good day everyone.

With the Lander BLM Field Office soon to release their proposed Resource Management Plan, I would like to voice the following as far as protecting the Greater South Pass Historic Landscape Area:

As we are all aware, during the mid-nineteenth century Wyoming’s South Pass was the only feasible passageway for hundreds of thousands of pioneers to all points west. Their diaries and journals are replete of perseverance, hope and hardship. It was a major conduit to the American Dream.

To this day there are still timeless, unspoiled wagon ruts with pristine viewsheds and it is all here in our own backyard to preserve for future generations. I believe we have reached a critical and defining moment for safeguarding the South Pass Historic Trails corridor.

Over the years my own personal experiences along the Sweetwater River Valley have been filled with wonderment. To walk in wagon ruts a hundred plus years old with unrivaled landform panoramas and without wind turbines, massive transmission lines, etc. gives one the sense of solitude and connection to the past.

To view emigrant inscriptions at Independence Rock, behold the anomaly of Devil’s Gate, stop at Split Rock or Ice Slough and feel the presence of early-day fur trappers and later the thousands of white covered wagons with the pioneers and their livestock slowly making their way west, to the sixth through ninth crossings of the Sweetwater River, and finally to stand at Ezra Meeker’s Oregon Trail Stone Marker at South Pass, one quickly gains a regard for this remote and extremely historic area.

Just as this one hundred mile corridor to South Pass joined east to west in the 1800’s, so too it must connect our past generations to future generations without unsightly intrusions. This is a time piece we should not slip away.

In summary, I deem it would be an embarrassment to our children and their children to exploit this most historic of all trails corridor.
“We walk in yesterday’s footprints just as future generations will walk in ours.”
Let’s make all generations proud.

Please consider supporting the Resource Protection Alternative.

Thank you.

William J. Higgins, III

Sample Letter Supporting South Pass

Mr. Cagney,

Wyoming is blessed with the best remaining traces of the old Oregon Trail anywhere in our country. In particular, Wyoming is home to Greater South Pass, without which our country's iconic westward migration would have been impossible. Wyoming as a thoroughfare to the Pacific is a significant influence on the state's history. South Pass is of obvious significance to the establishment of the Oregon, California, and Mormon Trails. More than 300,000 people followed the Oregon Trail through South Pass, between 1840 and 1860 on their way to Utah, Oregon, and California.

The region of South Pass was also hunting grounds and home to Native Americans for approximately 10,000 years before white explorers and fur trappers came to the area. Known only to Native Peoples until 1812, this area is historically signifiant as well to Shoshone, Lakota, Cheyenne, Arapahoe, Pawnee, Crow, Blackfeet, and Ute tribes.

Fortunately, as a result of Wyoming's previous conservation efforts, the historic landscape of South Pass remains virtually unchanged from how it appeared in the mid-1800s. And it should remain so.

At present, the Lander BLM is working on a Resource Management Plan which could change all that. I am writing to urge you to use your influence to ensure that South Pass remain a pristine historic jewel of this state. I am not asking for anything new, simply that this unique landscape continue to be managed as it has been in the past.

This would include forbidding any energy development that compromises the historic trails and their related viewsheds. Wind energy development, the only energy resource in the area, should not be permitted to degrade historic trails, or view corridors. I would request a five-mile "no surface occupancy" buffer to protect from these types of developments. Beyond that, distance from the trails can be determined on a case-by-case basis depending on topography. Such a system will protect the historic trails and core sage grouse areas.

There will never be another South Pass. Once it is compromised, it can never be reclaimed or mitigated. People come from all over the world to experience this amazing resource. In so doing, they also feed Wyoming's economy. As a former employee of Community Services Collaborative, who prepared the South Pass City Historic Buildings Evaluation for the Wyoming Recreation Commission in 1990, I urge you use your influence to protect South Pass for future generations.

Sincerely,
Cheyanne Valenzuela
Apache-Comanche-Mestiza
Historic Preservation Specialist for Research and Grantsmanship
Dakota Resource Group

Greater South Pass Needs Your Letters

We have received information that the Lander BLM is close to releasing their proposed Resource Management Plan. The proposal is likely to include three different alternatives, each of which would have different impacts for the Greater South Pass Historic Landscape:

Current Status; no change
Resource Protection
Resource Use

AHW will be supporting the resource protection or conservation alternative. Unsuprisingly, however, many of the influential policy-makers are pushing for the resource use alternative.
We are asking the BLM to consider managing the Greater South Pass Historic Landscape much as they have done in the past. We most certainly have no dispute with historic ranch uses in the area. As for mineral development, there is no gas or oil in the area. The biggest energy threat comes from potential wind energy projects. But even those have limited potential due to topography. We also believe that hard rock mining is incompatible with this area.

What we are asking is that the BLM adopt a five-mile "no surface occupancy" boundary around the trails. Beyond that, we believe that any project can and should be sited on a case-by-case basis depending on the landscape in the area. Adoption of these standards would also protect core sage grouse areas, an increasingly important issue in Wyoming.

We are asking that our supporters contact key decision-makers as soon as possible to make sure they understand the significance that the historic preservation community places on the Greater South Pass Historic Landscape. You can click here to go to our website where you will find a link under "Current Alerts" that will allow you to send a "one-click letter" to these decision-makers or use the contact information provided below to send surface mail.

TALKING POINTS

  • Wyoming is blessed with the most pristine historic emigrant trails anywhere in the country
  • The crown jewel of this system of trails is South Pass
  • Without South Pass, the iconic westward emigration would have been impossible
  • Thousands of people visit South Pass every year, pumping untold dollars into the local economy
  • Protecting South Pass for future generations is not a change in management; it's what our ancestors did for us; it's what we owe to our children
  • The RMP will guide management of the area for the next 15-20 years. It must reflect the interests of the future as much, if not more, than any short-term gain
  • The potential for mineral development is miniscule and trumped by the preservation imperative
  • Wind energy can be developed in other parts of the state, parts of the state that do not include a one-of-its-kind, internationally renowned cultural resource
CONTACT INFORMATION

Send your letters to:

Governor Dave Freudenthal
State Capitol, 200 West 24th Street
Cheyenne, WY 82002-0010
307-777-7434 (phone) 307-632-3909 (fax)

Don Simpson, BLM State Director
5353 Yellowstone Road
PO Box 1828, Cheyenne, Wyoming 82003-1828
307-775-6256 (phone) 307-775-6129 (fax)

Jim Cagney, Lander BLM Field Manager
1335 Main Street, PO Box 589
Lander, WY 82520-0589
307-332-8400 (phone) 307-332-8444 (fax)

Mary Hopkins, Interim SHPO
State Historic Preservation Office
Department 3431
1000 E. University Avenue
Laramie, Wyoming 82071
307-766-5323 (phone) 307-766-4262 (fax)