Evan E. Filby's Blog: South Fork and More, page 100
July 29, 2014
Newspaperwoman and Women’s Suffrage Advocate Abigail (Scott) Duniway [otd 07/29]
On July 29, 1852, Oregon Pioneer Abigail Jane Scott wrote in her party's journal, "Three miles brought us to Goose Creek; There is grass enough here for a small party of cattle; The water is not very good, being warm and muddy."
“Emigrants Crossing the Plains,” Henry Bryan Hall engraving.
Library of Congress.
Goose Creek was an important watering place on the Oregon Trail, located near where Burley is today. Abigail's father, John Tucker Scott, had assigned her primary responsibility for keepin...

Library of Congress.
Goose Creek was an important watering place on the Oregon Trail, located near where Burley is today. Abigail's father, John Tucker Scott, had assigned her primary responsibility for keepin...
Published on July 29, 2014 00:08
July 23, 2014
Gambler Patterson Shoots and Kills Ex-Sheriff Pinkham [otd 07/23]

Idaho City Historical Foundation.On Sunday, July 23, 1865, businessman and ex-sheriff Sumner Pinkham took a hired carriage from Idaho City to a resort about two miles west of town. Locals often enjoyed a relaxing dip in the pool fed by the warm springs out back. According to some, Pinkham and a few friends were soon in the bar singing raucous anti-Secesh songs. Yet others would dispute even that apparently simple fact.
A native of Maine, Pinkham had joined the rush to California...
Published on July 23, 2014 00:06
July 21, 2014
Ammunition Innovator and Manufacturer Richard, "Dick," Speer [otd 07/21]

Beal & Wells photo.Lewiston industrialist Richard A. "Dick" Speer was born July 21, 1915 in Cedar Falls, Iowa. His father, who started out as a farmer and nurseryman, took up "manufacturing and engineering pursuits" before Richard's birth. Thus, after a year at a teachers' college, Richard landed a job in the engineering department of the Maytag Corporation.
In 1939, he began taking courses at the University of Washington in Seattle while working nights as a tool and die maker...
Published on July 21, 2014 00:02
July 20, 2014
Poor Roads and Blistering Weather Hobble Traffic to the Idaho Gold Camps [otd 07/20]
On July 20, 1863, The Oregonian reported, “Increased facilities are offering daily for transportation to the Boise mines. We are informed that John Slavin & Co. have established a stage line to run from the Dalles to Bannock City.”
Mining around Bannock City, soon to be re-named Idaho City, was then on the upswing compared to placer fields over the ridge along Grimes Creek. Where Grimes had little water, streams around Idaho City still provided a good flow.
However, the stage line announcem...
Mining around Bannock City, soon to be re-named Idaho City, was then on the upswing compared to placer fields over the ridge along Grimes Creek. Where Grimes had little water, streams around Idaho City still provided a good flow.
However, the stage line announcem...
Published on July 20, 2014 00:03
Poor Roads and Blistering Weather Hobble Traffic to the Idaho Gold Camps
On July 20, 1863, The Oregonian reported, “Increased facilities are offering daily for transportation to the Boise mines. We are informed that John Slavin & Co. have established a stage line to run from the Dalles to Bannock City.”
Mining around Bannock City, soon to be re-named Idaho City, was then on the upswing compared to placer fields over the ridge along Grimes Creek. Where Grimes had little water, streams around Idaho City still provided a good flow.
However, the stage line announcem...
Mining around Bannock City, soon to be re-named Idaho City, was then on the upswing compared to placer fields over the ridge along Grimes Creek. Where Grimes had little water, streams around Idaho City still provided a good flow.
However, the stage line announcem...
Published on July 20, 2014 00:03
July 19, 2014
Railroad Town of Burley Incorporated [otd 7/19]
The town of Burley, Idaho, was incorporated on July 19, 1909. The village had grown explosively since being platted four years earlier, and many businesses supported the growing farm population. That included a new Bank of Commerce, founded in the spring of 1909 with former Boise Mayor James H. Hawley as Vice President.
Burley, ca 1918. [Hawley]
The location, near where Goose Creek emptied into the Snake River, was a familiar landmark on the Oregon Trail. Other than the river itself, the creek...

The location, near where Goose Creek emptied into the Snake River, was a familiar landmark on the Oregon Trail. Other than the river itself, the creek...
Published on July 19, 2014 00:09
July 16, 2014
Telegraph Line Links Eagle Rock (Idaho Falls) to the Outside World [otd 07/16]
On July 16, 1866, workers completed a new telegraph line from Utah into the stage stop at Taylor’s Bridge. Matt Taylor and has partners had received a franchise for their toll bridge from the Territorial legislature in late 1864 [blog, December 10]. The bridge site, also referred to as Eagle Rock (today’s Idaho Falls), became a major stopping point on the route into Montana.
John Creighton. Omaha Illustrated.
The telegraph crews were supervised by John Creighton, a man with much experience in t...

The telegraph crews were supervised by John Creighton, a man with much experience in t...
Published on July 16, 2014 00:30
July 11, 2014
Union and Non-Union Silver/Lead Miners Killed in Coeur d'Alene Battle [otd 07/11]
On the morning of Monday, July 11, 1892, striking union miners and a crew at the Frisco Mine exchanged gunfire. This lead-silver mine is located about four miles northeast of Wallace, Idaho. The crew consisted of replacement workers imported by the mining company and guards to protect them.
Frisco Mill, ca. 1890. University of Idaho Digital Archives.
The conflict had started early in the year, when the mine owners reduced the wages paid to lower-skilled workers. Sure this was just the opening w...

The conflict had started early in the year, when the mine owners reduced the wages paid to lower-skilled workers. Sure this was just the opening w...
Published on July 11, 2014 00:09
July 4, 2014
Major Pinkney Lugenbeel Picks Site for Fort Boise [otd 07/04]

U. S. Army Archives.On July 4, 1863 Major Pinkney Lugenbeel formally selected a spot to build a military encampment, which the U. S. Army initially called Camp Boise.
A West Point graduate and Regular Army officer, Lugenbeel had been assigned to train Volunteer recruits in the Pacific Northwest at the start of the Civil War. These partially-trained western Volunteer troops quickly replaced Regular Army units that were transferred east.
Undermanned Army garrisons had do...
Published on July 04, 2014 00:05
June 28, 2014
Judge Frank Harris: Weiser Rancher and Mining Investor [otd 07/28]

Illustrated History.Judge and state Senator Frank Harris was born June 28, 1854 in Placerville, California, 25-30 miles east of Sacramento. In the 1870s, he read law in two different firms in Eureka, California. Frank moved to Idaho in 1880 and established a home in Weiser.
Harris immediately qualified for the Idaho bar. One of his earliest cases was to draw up the articles of incorporation and bylaws for an irrigation company. Many farmers who had settled along the Weis...
Published on June 28, 2014 00:04
South Fork and More
As an author's vehicle, this blog will include my thoughts on the writing process, supplemental information about my books, and "status"updates on current projects.
My long-time blog -- the South Fork As an author's vehicle, this blog will include my thoughts on the writing process, supplemental information about my books, and "status"updates on current projects.
My long-time blog -- the South Fork Companion -- leans heavily toward Idaho history. In particular, I post an "On This Day" (OTD) item with an Idaho "spin" for every day of the year. I originally tried to have the system bring over the entire item, but the transfer does not handle the photo captions well. That's not good, because I generally include two images with each of my OTD posts. ...more
My long-time blog -- the South Fork As an author's vehicle, this blog will include my thoughts on the writing process, supplemental information about my books, and "status"updates on current projects.
My long-time blog -- the South Fork Companion -- leans heavily toward Idaho history. In particular, I post an "On This Day" (OTD) item with an Idaho "spin" for every day of the year. I originally tried to have the system bring over the entire item, but the transfer does not handle the photo captions well. That's not good, because I generally include two images with each of my OTD posts. ...more
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