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Wind Cave National Park: The First 100 Years
Wind Cave National Park: The First 100 Years
Wind Cave National Park: The First 100 Years
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Wind Cave National Park: The First 100 Years

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Wind Cave is one of the longest and most complex caves in the world. Complete with more than 100 miles of surveyed cavern passageways below ground and 28,295 acres of diverse ecology above, Wind Cave National Park is an American treasure with an impressive history. The first recorded discovery of Wind Cave occurred in 1881 when brothers Jesse and Tom Bingham followed the sounds of the whistling wind and came upon the cave. In 1903, the cave and surrounding area became Wind Cave National Park, the seventh national park in the nation and the first created with a cave as its focal point. In the 1930s, the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) established a camp near the park headquarters. The CCC built roads and buildings, landscaped and made improvements to better accommodate tours inside the cave.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 10, 2003
ISBN9781439642054
Wind Cave National Park: The First 100 Years
Author

Peggy Sanders

In Wind Cave National Park: The First 100 Years, author Peggy Sanders encapsulates its history in over 200 vintage images. Mrs. Sanders is a farm/ranch wife and author from Oral, South Dakota. She is the author of another book from the Images of America series, Fall River County and Hot Springs (SD). A lifelong resident of the area, she and her husband have two sons who are the fifth generation of homestead descendents to live in Fall River County.

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    Wind Cave National Park - Peggy Sanders

    past.

    INTRODUCTION

    The early discovery of Wind Cave by American Indians brought about several versions of legends concerning the cave. One of the Lakota stories is that buffalo originated in a cave and that Wind Cave was the sacred home of the white buffalo. Another holds that a woman who was a personified buffalo lived in the cave. No matter what is believed, the wind from the cave holds a fascination for all.

    Officially, the credit for finding Wind Cave, in the spring of 1881, goes to brothers Jesse and Tom Bingham. John Bohi, historian, gave possible credit to Lame Johnny, who claimed in a leaflet that he found the cave in 1877. However, Anton Snyder, a Wind Cave ranger, wrote in the January 28, 1928 edition of the Black Hills Engineer that the Black Hills pioneer John Wells was the one who located the cave. We will follow the official version in this writing.

    As the story goes, the Binghams were out deer hunting and Jesse’s hat was blown from his head by a gust of wind emitted from an 8-foot-by-10-inch hole in the rock formation. Some days later, Jesse returned to the spot with some friends, and to show off his newly learned trick, he threw his hat up into the air. To his surprise and the amazement of his friends, the hat did not blow into the air, but instead was sucked into the hole. Even with all of the explorations to date, the hat has never been found.

    Ownership of the cave became a sore subject in the early years after the discovery. The first location certificates were filed in 1886 by Frank Horton and Nels Hyde who abandoned them soon thereafter. L.C. Faris filed one in 1889. Then a man named Day filed three mining claims on the land in 1890; shortly afterwards, he sold them for the tidy sum of $250 to J.C. Moss, the president of the South Dakota Mining Company. The other partners in the company were M.A. Moss and R.B. Moss, and the same group also owned the Moss Engraving Company in New York City. The claims were dutifully filed and recorded in the office of the Custer County Register of Deeds.

    Jesse McDonald and his young adult sons, Elmer and Alvin, were hired by the South Dakota Mining Company to manage the property. It is said that after Moss was called to New York on a family matter, McDonald took over the rights to the property. In 1891, John Stabler and family moved to Hot Springs and there they opened the newly built Parrot Hotel. Once Stabler visited the cave, he thought of the possibilities offered and purchased an interest in the cave.

    After the McDonalds’ arrival, serious exploration began in the cave and the findings were recorded for us to read. Alvin, variously called Alva or Alvah in some references, kept quite a detailed diary of his ventures into the cave. In January of 1891, he went into the cave 27 times. He became so enamoured with it, that on the days he didn’t go in, he felt homesick for the cave. Alvin named the rooms, described them in his writings, and exaggerated the distances. To keep from getting lost, he laid down a trail of twine as he went in; he then only had to follow it and gather it up as he went out. Alvin and his companions had to break pieces of rock out of the passages so they could continue their exploits.

    The Stablers and the McDonalds feuded intensely for several years over possession of the cave, but the government required that land claimants had to either farm or mine the property. The McDonalds and Stablers did neither, as the land was not right for farming and there were no minerals to mine; thus, the law did not show either family to be bona-fide claimants. The federal government recognized the importance of the site, took possession, and created the first national park focused around a cave.

    The cave interior is only one part of the park. The 28,295 acres of prairie and forest are home to an array of plants and animals that are fascinating; put them and the cave together and it’s an experience of a lifetime for nature lovers.

    Officially, the Great Depression, a severe worldwide economic downturn, began in October of 1929 and ended at the beginning of World War II. However, on the Great Plains it actually began years before due to the fact that a depression in the agricultural sector started in 1923. The crop and commodity prices were very low, farms were foreclosed upon, and banks failed. In the early 1930s, drought of unheard of proportions grasped the Heartland. The winds were horrendous too and dirt blew so badly that the era was dubbed, The Dirty Thirties.

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