By Christine Gianas Weinheimer EBS CONTRIBUTOR
Guess who’s celebrating
a birthday? It’s our famous neighbor, Yellowstone National Park, which turns
147 years old in March. Yellowstone was established as the world’s first
national park by an act of Congress, and President Ulysses S. Grant signed it into
law on March 1, 1872. In honor of this special day, here’s a brief look back at
Yellowstone’s beginning.
In the early
1800s, European-American trappers brought back stories from the West of a place
where the earth hissed and bubbled, where multi-colored hot springs and spouting
geysers filled the landscape. These reports were largely dismissed as delusions
or tall tales until formal expeditions commenced in 1869. Resulting descriptions
of the hydrothermal features, along with huge waterfalls, canyons and herds of
wildlife, fueled curiosity in Washington D.C.
Further
proof in the form of Thomas Moran’s artwork and William H. Jackson’s
photographs from the Hayden Expedition of 1871 are said to have helped convince
Congress that the Yellowstone landscape was exceptionally beautiful and
valuable.
Yellowstone National
Park was named for one of its most prominent features: the Yellowstone River,
reportedly called “Mi tse a-da-zi” by the Minnetaree tribe, which literally
translates to “Rock Yellow River.” Canadian trappers translated the name into
French as “Roche Jaune,” which eventually appeared on maps in English as
“Yellow Stone,” and explorers began referring to the entire region as
Yellowstone.
The park’s
early promoters envisioned Yellowstone National Park would exist at no expense
to the government. This didn’t work out so well when the first, unpaid superintendent
didn’t have funds to protect park wildlife and other resources from poachers,
vandals and squatters. Congress appropriated funds to protect it in 1878, but
efforts to safeguard the park were largely unsuccessful until the U.S. Army
took charge in 1886. The National Park Service was later formed in 1916.
The
Yellowstone boundaries we’re familiar with today differ from the straight,
rectangular-shaped boundaries in place when the park was established. In 1929,
President Herbert Hoover signed a bill changing the borders to better conform
to natural land and water features. Three years later, Hoover issued an
executive order adding around 7,000 acres above the original north boundary
near Gardiner to provide winter range for ungulates.
Today,
Yellowstone is one of the largest nearly intact temperate-zone ecosystems on
Earth and preserves a collection of more than 10,000 hydrothermal features—more
than the rest of the world combined. It’s home to the largest concentration of
wildlife in the lower 48 states and is the only place in the U.S. where bison
have lived continuously since prehistoric times.
Countless individuals
have contributed to the preservation of Yellowstone over the years and thousands
continue to play a role in its stewardship. For instance, Yellowstone Forever, the
park’s official education and fundraising nonprofit partner, provides
opportunities for educational programming and volunteerism, and is building a
network of supporters dedicated to preserving the park.
Learn more about Yellowstone Forever by visiting yellowstone.org.
Christine Gianas Weinheimer lives in Bozeman and has been writing about Yellowstone for 17 years.