Jim Bridger Architect
Over the
years I have written numerous short stories about mountain men, one of my
favorite subjects, Jim Bridger has always been a favorite of mine. Sometimes he
is forgotten for some of real impact he had on Wyoming and the west.
In 1862, President Lincoln signed a bill that
created the Union Pacific Railway Company. General Dodge and other government
officials were unsure of which route through Wyoming would be the best, follow
the Oregon Trail or take a more southern route. So they called in America’s foremost
authority on the Rocky Mountains, Jim Bridger. Word was sent to Bridger in St.
Louis that he was needed in Denver on important business.
When Bridger
arrived in Denver, the engineers showed him their plans and asked the old mountain
man where the best place to cross the mountains might be. Bridger asked for a
piece of paper, grabbed a charcoal burned stick out of the fire and preceded to
draw a map of the Rockies in Colorado and Wyoming. Never one to miss a chance
to take a job at government officials, Bridger told them they should have saved
their money, he could have drawn the map in St. Louis, but he was secretly
grateful for this one last chance to visit his beloved Rockies.
On that
little sheet of paper Bridger drew the exact rout that the transcontinental
railroad followed across the state of Wyoming. The railroad still follows that
same route today, through the rugged pass between Cheyenne and Laramie. Later Interstate
80 paralleled the transcontinental railroad across Wyoming. Making ol’ Gabe (Jim
Bridger) not only a mountain man but a builder of railroads and interstates, Bridger
may have never learned to read and write but he was one fine map maker and
architect.
In another area I am 2/3 through
with my final review/rewrite of my novel, currently titled, Commitment, hope to have it placed with
an agent or published by summer. Originally I had hoped to try it as a Black
Horse Western but at nearly 85,000 words I will need to look elsewhere.
For those who have followed this
blog since the old days at AOL-yes then I will attempt final rewrites on my
other novel. The Mystery at Hell’s Half
Acre.
2 comments:
For an illiterate, Jim Bridger was one damn smart feller.
You bet he was Oscar.
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