Just as the characters in my historical romance are fictitious, so are the locales. Saying that Willow Vale is a “Wyoming ” novel gives me a big canvas to paint with broad strokes of an imaginary brush. When Francesca Sittoni lands in America , her first home is a Union Pacific coal mining camp in southwest Wyoming . In 1898, the Union Pacific had seven coal mines in Wyoming , from which the company sold coal in addition to mining coal to feed its own steam engines.
Two
images of U.P. company houses c. 1920s.
The
company boardinghouse is on the right above.
Photos
courtesy
Sweetwater
County Historical Museum
|
The Union Pacific Railroad did not set out to be a coal mining company. But its coal supplier in
Overview
of coal camp of Superior, Wyoming c.1920
Photo
courtesy Sweetwater County Historical Museum
|
My fictional town of Hawk Point , Wyoming , is an amalgam of historic Western coal mining towns. Coal camps sat atop the mines. If the coal town survived the closing of the mines with the coming of diesel engines, what resulted was a hodgepodge of former little camps cobbled together into one community with very crooked streets. In the case of Rock Springs , the main east-west route through town exits from the Interstate highway on 9th Street, changes to Center Street, and then switches to Dewar Drive before finding its sinuous way back to I-80.
After her husband’s death in a mine explosion, Francesca goes to fictional Willow Valley to live with Wyoming rancher Kent Reed. Again I used a compilation of facts about ranching in Wyoming to imagine their life on a Western ranch in the years after World War I.
Bill
Hutton and Jim Campbell haying on what is now Hutton Heights subdivision in
Green River, Wyoming. Photo courtesy Sweetwater County Historical Museum
|
Bill
Hutton and Dave Logan haying, winter 1914, Green River, Wyoming.
Photo
courtesy Sweetwater County Historical Museum
|
Mud
Spring Ranch south of Rock Springs, Wyoming.
Photo
courtesy Sweetwater County Historical Museum
|
There are fascinating websites dealing with
Addendum June 12, 2012
The caption of the last photograph above, of the Mud Spring Ranch, originally said, "Haying on Mud Spring Ranch." My town-girl roots are showing. These helpful comments came in on Facebook:
Nancy Radke The bottom picture, the one shown here, is not haying, they are harvesting. Our harvester was pulled by 4 horses and 36 mules. This one doesn't have that big a team, but the land looks flatter. Hay just requires a mower, and then after it is dry, a hay rake, which I used to ride on as a kid to flip the teeth when they got full. That was scary, as I had nothing to hang onto except the small metal seat set above the rake.
Jacquie Rogers Nancy, I remember riding on the seeder, also with no handles, and it was a bumpy ride, too. My job was to let Dad know when any of the bins were nearing empty. To do that, I had to reach down and open the lid--it was a long reach for a kid, and if I fell, the disks would have cut me to shreds. Scared me out of my wits, but everyone had a job and all jobs were important. Ah, the healthy farm life!
Nancy Radke Yes. Hay was cut with a sickle. The turning wheels made the teeth go back and forth if I remember correctly, so it didn't need a motor. Neither did the rake.
Nancy Radke Yes. My grandson just told me I worry too much, but it isn't worry. We learned to look ahead to spot the dangers and try to avoid them. I survived those years with just an injured disk in my back, a scratched eye and a sprained ankle...all three from falling from horses when they were running away.
Nancy Radke I've lots of memories of those times. Our first telephone, the crank kind where you talked with the operator. We even rode horses to school now and then, but we did have a school bus, which was the size of a regular van. There's a book called "Little Britches" by Ralph Moody, where he wrote about his experiences growing up in Wyoming (I think).
Thank you, Jacquie and Nancy, for the helpful comments. The latest from author and blogger Jacquie Rogers is Much Ado About Marshals, a Western historical available on Kindle at Amazon. Nancy Radke is the author of Show and Tell Bible, part of a selection of innovative class material.
4 comments:
Super pictures, Alethea. I also like the name Burntfork and read Letters of a Woman Homesteader, still on my bookshelves.
Arletta
There is also "Letters on an Elk Hunt" by Elinore Pruitt Stewart (both available for free on Amazon).
Love the UP history, Alethea! My dad is retired from them, and both my brothers and my brother in law have worked for them. Now my nephew in law works for them, so you see, UP runs in our blood. Thanks for sharing!
Thanks for the comments. I always appreciate feedback!
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