Watching over Yellowstone: The US Army's Experience in America's First National Park, 1886-1918

Watching over Yellowstone: The US Army's Experience in America's First National Park, 1886-1918

by Thomas C. Rust
Watching over Yellowstone: The US Army's Experience in America's First National Park, 1886-1918

Watching over Yellowstone: The US Army's Experience in America's First National Park, 1886-1918

by Thomas C. Rust

Paperback

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Overview

When, in 1883, Congress charged the US Army with managing Yellowstone National Park, soldiers encountered a new sort of hostility: work they were untrained for, in a daunting physical and social environment where they weren’t particularly welcome. When they departed in 1918, America had a new sort of serviceman: the National Park Service Ranger. From the creation of Yellowstone National Park to the conclusion of the army’s superintendence, Watching over Yellowstone tells the boots-on-the-ground story of the US troops charged with imposing order on man and nature in America's first national park.

Yellowstone National Park had been created only fourteen years before Captain Moses Harris arrived at Mammoth Hot Springs with his company, Troop M of the First United States Cavalry, in August of 1886. And in those years, the underfunded, poorly supervised park had been visited freely by over-eager tourists, vandals, and poachers. Thomas C. Rust describes the task confronting Congress, military superintendents, and the common soldiers as the ever-increasing number of tourists, commercial interests, and politics stained the unruly park. At a time when the army was already undergoing a great transformation, the common soldiers were now struggling with unusual duties in unfamiliar terrain, often in unaccustomed proximity to the social elite who dominated the tourist class—fertile if uncertain ground for both the failures and the successes that eventually shaped the National Park Service’s ranger corps. What this meant for the average soldier emerges from the materials Rust consults: orders, circulars, inspection reports, court-martial cases, civilian accounts, and evidence from excavated soldier stations in the park. A nuanced social history from a rare ground-level perspective, his book captures an extraordinary moment in the story of America’s military and its national parks.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780700629619
Publisher: University Press of Kansas
Publication date: 06/05/2020
Series: Modern War Studies
Pages: 280
Sales rank: 1,161,650
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.20(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Thomas C. Rust is professor of history at Montana State University Billings. He is the author of Lost Fort Ellis: Frontier History of Bozeman, as well as articles in many publications, including Montana: The Magazine of Western History, Archaeology in Montana, and Military History of the West.

Table of Contents

Preface

Introduction: “To Correct and Remedy the Existing State of Things”

1. “The Work Is Not a Military Duty”: The Constabulary Soldier in Yellowstone Park

2. “Peculiar, Perplexing and Severe Duties”: Life at Fort Yellowstone

3. “Conditions . . . Resemble Those Existing 30-Odd Years Ago”: Life in the Park’s Interior

4. An “Undesirable Station”: Desertion, Social Class, and the Basis for the National Park Service Ranger

5. “Petty Grievances”: Isolated Duty at the Soldier Outposts

Conclusion: “Patriotism . . . and the Love of Nature”: The Close of the Military Era

Notes

Bibliography

Index

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