Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Sheridan's 1918 Easter



Easter weekend in Sheridan 100 years ago was a balmy affair, with Good Friday topping 61 and the following day a beautiful 72;  Easter Sunday dipped a bit but was still a sunny 61.

Basking in that unseasonably warm weather, the town bristled with church activities. The Holy Name and Congressional churches held special music programs. The Methodist Episcopal church held a 7am communion, followed by a "love feast." The Presbyterians hosted the DeMolay commandry of the Knights Templary which "exempl[ified] the work of masonry." Mrs. Jones, "the Welsh singer" oversaw the First Baptist church's Easter program.

Before the music and feasts and services, Sheridanites had the honor--or whatever you want to call it--of being among the first Americans to set their clocks back for Daylight Saving time the previous night. We imagine there were plenty of yawns and red eyes in church that Easter morning.

From The Sheridan Daily Enterprise, March 31, 1918.
Click to enlarge.

The Monday celebrations the article above mentions included several dances as well as the Episcopal Guild's annual Easter Monday Bazaar.  

Leading up to the holiday, local businesses maximized efforts to capitalize on the Easter momentum in the public mind, touting Easter dresses, shoes, and suits. Or a plant or two. (Not much has changed, in that regard, in the years since.)

Click to enlarge.
Click to enlarge.





Sunday, March 25, 2018

Historical Photos of Churches

With Easter approaching, here are a few church photos from some of our collections.

Log cabin church in the Bighorn Mountains, year unknown.
From the Elsa Spear Byron collection.
Click to enlarge.

This is how Sheridanites used to roll on Sunday mornings.
From the Cooksley collection.
Click to enlarge.

First Baptist Church in 1895, with many pioneer families
present: Colliers, Houghtons, Goodnights, Calloways, Simeses,
Evanses, Weltners, and Guyers (the photo was annotated
"Property of E.G. Guyer").
From the Bourne collection.
Click to enlarge.


First Baptist Church in 1920.
From the Bourne collection.
Click to enlarge.

Unidentified church after a snowstorm in 1920.
From the Byron collection.
Click to enlarge.

Mt. Olive (A.M.E.) Church, the first church with a prominently
African American congregation in Sheridan.
From the Cooksley collection.
Click to enlarge.

First Congregational Church in 1940, located at the corner of
Brooks and Works streets.
From the Diers collection.
Click to enlarge.


Holy Name Catholic Church in 1940.
From the Diers collection.
Click to enlarge.

Wednesday, March 14, 2018

There are More Things in Heaven and Earth Than Leprechauns: Native American Little People Legends

With St. Patrick's Day quickly approaching, thoughts of the succulent aroma of corned beef and green-tinged beverages swirl in the public mind. And those wily leprechauns, of course, them with their pots o' gold. If only.

Pots of gold  and green beer aside, it probably comes as no surprise that Europe doesn't hold a monopoly on mythological little folk.

Native Americans throughout the country told tales of tribes of brawny wee folk with mercurial tendencies: sometimes helpful, sometimes vicious. One such legend became famous when Unsolved Mysteries did an episode devoted to the mysterious San Pedro Mountain mummy found near Casper in 1934.

We'll start in the southeast and work our way west, to Shoshone and Crow country.

The Choctaw, for one, were wary of the little folk, fearing that boys would be kidnapped. A little further west, the Cherokee sorted the little people into three groups, according to temperament: the Laurels, the Dogwoods, and the Rocks. The Dogwoods made good allies; the Laurels were benevolent or mischievous, depending on their mood; and the Rock People, well, the less said about them, the better.

"How the Morning Star Lost Her Fish," from
Stories the Iroquois Tell Their Children, 1917
Further west yet, we find the story of a large band of Lakota ran afoul of the little people when they, the Lakota, unknowingly crossed into "elfin-like" beings' territory. The little people ambushed the Lakota camp at night, killing most of them. The assailants then set every horse loose at a panicked gallop, forcing the wounded survivors to flee slower and more vulnerable. Fortunately, not all encounters with the little folk were as violent.

A Nez Perce tale told of a man and his brother who met a little person, whom they described as "[a] little man with very small eyes and a wrinkled face. He had long hair, uncombed, and he wore nothing but a deer skin wrapped around his waist and hanging down over his knees."

The Flathead tribe, according to Ella E. Clark's Indian Legends from the Northern Rockies, told of a civilization of "dwarfs" who bore a close resemblance to the natives, except for their dark skin. They raised tiny black horses that stood about three feet high mostly as a food source for the winter months.Clark relates that, once upon a time, these folk dwelt near Rosebud Lake in Montana, preferring its thick underbrush (apparently good for hiding). According to the lore, these little people would die every morning, resting in craters in the mountain, and "arise every night to dance and play. An oh, how they danced...

One member of the Flathead tribe, medicine man Charlie Gabe, disclosed his experience to an anthropologist of an incident when the medicine man was but 14 years old. One summer day, when looking for his spirit power high amid the mountain peaks, Charlie saw a little lake where none should be. Just above the lake, at the top of the peak, he saw a cottonwood log, one so completely out of place he thought it was the very log that came to rest after the great floods receded from the world, and so decided the area was ripe with spirit power. (Here's the rub: this log had been recently cut down, and the flood happened in ancient times.) As Charlie was preparing to accept his spirit power, he found a crater and peeked over its edge. What he found there stunned him.

To Charlie's astonished gaze, a clutch little people had struck up an intricate dance. He ran down to join the ceremony, to which the dwarfs reluctantly admitted him. They danced like an 80s pop song from four dusks to four dawns, until, that is, Charlie had enough and made a beeline down the mountain.

On Charlie's way out, he tried once, then twice, then thrice to snatch one of the wee folk but to no avail, but on try number four he nabbed a feller. In the catch, a bargain: he had to care for the dwarf for four years, keeping him hidden.

There was a happy end as the four years came to a close; the dwarf, upon bidding farewell, promised Charlie protection and the power to help anyone he wanted. So while the log wasn't the one from the great floods, Charlie Gabe did find quite the spirit power and became a renowned medicine man among the Flathead.

The Shoshone of Wyoming tell of a legendary race of little people, the Ninnimbe (also known by other names), who made their home in the Rockies, notably the Pryors and the Big Horn Mountains. These wee folk didn't dance and they didn't give anyone any spirit power. They wore goatskins, were about 2-3 feet high, and were adept bow hunters. Pray you don't run into one on a bad day.

In the early days, the Shoshone and Ninnimbe were at odds; the little people, who could turn invisible at will, took out several Shoshone with their poisoned--and, yes, invisible--arrows.

Luckily for the Shoshone, the conflict eventually blew over and the two groups found ways to mind the other's borders. One day in those better times, a warrior heard strange, humanlike cries coming from the ledge of a cliff. Upon investigating, he saw an eagle attacking a little person just below. He saved the Ninnimbe, who showed the warrior humble gratitude for saving his life.

Legend has it one of the Ninnimbe--named Ninnimbe, appropriately enough-- lives still, high in the mountains. To some, he bears the appearance of a tiny, two-foot-tall boy, running through the trees, hunting with his arrows. Others see him as a small, red-nosed old man, "sturdily built, dressed in the skins of mountain sheep that are painted bright colors," who can become invisible at will.

Closing out our stories of the legendary little people of North America, the famous San Pedro Mountain mummy, discovered by two gold prospectors south of the Pathfinder and Alcova reservoirs in 1934.

Frank Carr and Cecil Main dynamited open a cave when they made the famous find. They gathered the tiny body and from there, it made the rounds to touring sideshows, to the labs of the Boston Museum and The American Museum of Natural History, and finally, to the home of a Casper family in 1950. After that, the trail stops cold. Tap a line into the grapevine, and you'll hear folks whispering that the little people turned up and retrieved their sacred relic. They're apparently busy, because the San Pedro mummy wasn't the only one of its kind found in Wyoming.

An x-ray of the mummy.
Image from Human-Resonance.org

A 1977 Billings Gazette article*, "Do 'Little People' Skulk Among Us?," told of the discoveries of little people's remains found throughout Wyoming. A sheepherder, known only as Senor Martinez, found a body and six skulls near the vicinity of Carr and Main's find, but hastily returned the remains once his horse and several sheep froze to death, fearing a curse. The muddy details of such stories, including the San Pedro mummy's, have begun to circulate some doubt as to their veracity. At one point, it seems, just about everyone's aunt had one of their skulls.

The San Pedro Mountain mummy perseveres in America's consciousness nonetheless, often flirting with controversy. Some think it's the real deal while others, like former University of Wyoming biological anthropology professor, George Gill, who once examined the mummy, think the strange, small bodies can be explained scientifically (as Gill suggested, infant anencephaly). Alas, the mummy has been missing for decades, so conclusive DNA analysis is beyond our reach at this time.

Whether you believe the little folk really do exist or that their tales have roots outside the realm of the supernatural, good stories are worth a goldmine--or a good dose of spirit power, under the right circumstances-- on their own merit, and the little people lore of America's indigenous cultures certainly counts.

Click on the images below to enlarge.

Bob David holds the mummy in 1950.
Image from WyoHistory.org
Image from AncientOrigins.Net





















*Many thanks to Debi Moody for sharing her copy of the article.

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Monday, March 12, 2018

Women's History Month



March is Women’s History Month and the library is celebrating the lives of women of all walks of life. Women’s History Month was first recognized in 1987 after Congress passed Public Law 100-9 on March 12th of that year. 



President Ronald Reagan issued the first proclamation recognizing Women’s History Month on March 16, 1987. Every president since has followed suit.

To celebrate Women’s History Month, the library has various books on women’s history available for checkout the table near the circulation desk. A display case, located near the non-fiction section, is also filled with various historical items relevant to women with Sheridan County connections.

Music-Loving Baby in 1911

Celebrating Women's History Month, a picture of former resident Beryl Ladd, sitting in he maestro seat as a happy, music-loving baby in 1911. She went on to become a full Professor of Music at Oberlin's Conservatory of Music in Ohio.

Click to enlarge.

Wednesday, March 7, 2018

A Rare Aurora Borealis Event, 100 Years Ago Today

Most folks associate the Wyoming Room with genealogy, obituary records, city directories, and rare copies of western history books. But did you know we also have US Department of Agriculture Weather Bureau records for Sheridan from 1907-1948?

On this day in 1918, at 7:40pm in the northwestern sky, Sheridanites were treated to quite a show: a particularly extraordinary sighting of the Northern Lights. 

The Northern Lights occasionally appear in Sheridan, but March 1918 had been the first seen in quite some time, according to the weather station's notes. Add to that the Sheridan Enterprise,  in its article the following day, noted that the "occurrence was out of season" and  that the colors were strikingly vivid, especially red. Making the event especially unique was that red was rarely the prominent color in the Aurora. 

Weather Bureau records for March 7, 1918.
Click to enlarge.

Those lucky enough to bear witness first saw a red sheet...extending upward" shifting to "a shaft of white...breaching a higher altitude" with the "depth of color varying from minute to minute." The northwestern display shifted east where "at times, half the NE sky was red." At times, the lights "resembled a reflection of cloud sheets from some huge fire...with streamers shooting upward halfway to the girth...across the whole northern sky." People up at Dome Lake were able to see the display until midnight.

Based on the weather station's description, this is probably
close to the Northern Lights Sheridanites saw 100 years ago.
Stock image from RobertHarding.com. Click to enlarge.





Wednesday, February 14, 2018

Valentine's Day in Sheridan, 100 Years Ago


100 years ago, Sheridanites celebrated in a mostly low-key fashion, with luncheons and dinner parties. The Coffeen store was the place to go for V-Day décor. Click on the images below to enlarge.






Two women, Sarah Leitner and Frances Josselyn, went all out the evening after, hosting what sounds like quite an elegant and colorful party. Guests were even treated to bluebird place cards with a “dainty message” from St. Valentine himself.






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Thursday, February 8, 2018

You're Never Too Young: Dr. Samuel W. Service, Sheridan's 'Grand Old Man'

We found this colorful character when helping a patron with genealogical research.


A local character of the most colorful variety, Dr. Samuel W. Service lived his remaining years in Sheridan, creating many stories to share.

The world didn't know what it was in for when Service entered it on January 1, 1826, in New York.

He went on to serve in three, count'em three, wars, as a veterinary surgeon: the Civil War, the Indian Wars of the 1870s, and the Spanish-American War.

During his long tenure in the United States military, he won "blue letters of praise and commendations from leaders under which he operated." In 1910, he was commissioned to report to Fort MacKenzie, after spending some time at Fort Ethan Allen in Virginia and Canada. He was 84 and according to Sheridan newspapers, held the record for the oldest actively serving member of the U.S. armed forces.

As though his military career didn't add enough color to his life, Service was also a "graduate optician and expert jeweler." At 77, when most folks start hitting the rocking chair, S.W. Service would have none of it. He moved to Sheridan where he started a jewelry store with his son, William, at 41 S. Main.

From the June 10, 1910 edition of the Sheridan Post.
Click to enlarge.
Ten or so years later, Dr. Service opened a veterinary hospital in the back of that jewelry store, after returning from duty at Fort Ethan Allen. He later moved the hospital to his residence at 835 Olive Street.

Well into his 90s, Service, known then affectionately as 'Sheridan's Grand Old Man,' made it a point to see all he could of the region, travelling by car a couple times a year--a pretty big deal in the 1910s.

When at the home front, he loved "mix[ing] with the boys" at the Eagles' lodge.

In 1924, he made front page news when he went sledding with local kids down the Park Street hill--just weeks after he was hit by a car. All of this when he was 98 years old.

Later that same year, Service suffered a stroke, causing many to fear the worst. It didn't stop him. Not by a long shot.

To top it all off, at age 102, Dr. Service made news again when he almost blew up a hat shop downtown after lighting his pipe too close to the cleaning machine (gasoline was used to clean hats back then). You do have to look your best, no matter your age.

Service passed away in his sleep at home in December 1929 after what we can all agree was a long, full life. At the time of his death, he was one of the few remaining Civil War veterans in the country.

Photo credit: The Sheridan Enterprise.

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Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Brooks Hill Sledding Accident: A Safety Warning from 1925



Sheridan's Brooks Street hill is a steep and tempting one for area youngsters.

On January 18, 1925, a light fog cloaked that Saturday afternoon, a fairly warm one for January with the mercury pushing 40 degrees. As 9-year-old Frank Blum and his chum boarded their sleds at the crest of Brooks Street Hill, they threw caution to the wind. As the boys rocketed through the Burkitt Street intersection, Frank’s buddy slid through, missing Walter Small’s car by a hair. But Blum wasn’t so lucky.


Just a hair behind, he ran smack dab into the car’s rear wheel. Blum was rushed to Sheridan County Memorial where he lay in serious condition for days. The story does have a happy ending…eventually. Young Mr. Blum spent (at least) the next month at home, recuperating with a fractured skull and other injuries. Sadly, he wasn’t the first or the last: the article referenced below begins “Frank Blum…was the first coasting victim of the year.”

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Sunday, December 31, 2017

A Young Wyoming Author's First Foray into Publishing, New Year's Eve, 1911

Happy New Year's Eve from the Wyoming Room!

On this day in 1911, 11-year-old ranch girl Mary Olga Moore's chapbook on the history of Lake DeSmet appeared in the Sheridan Post. We have copies of her original chapbooks, pictured below, as well as her two novels...

Click on image to enlarge.

A University of Wyoming graduate, Moore wrote for the Sheridan Post-Enterprise, the Laramie Daily Boomerang, and The Denver Post. In 1937, she published a novel about Wyoming, Wind-Swept, and in 1949, an autobiographical novel about her colorful experiences in Washington D.C., I'll Meet You in the Lobby. The Sheridan County Library also houses some of her fiction.

Moore worked in Washington D.C., New York, and London for the Office of War Information and was later a public relations specialist in D.C. She eventually returned to her beloved home state where she passed away in 1981. Click on the image of Moore's chapbooks below to enlarge (the book at center, red cover, is her history of Lake DeSmet).


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Sunday, December 24, 2017

Christmas Newspaper Illustrations from the 1920s

A look back at Christmastime in Sheridan newspapers. In the early and mid-1920s, our newspaper went all out for its Christmas editions with beautiful, full-page art with decorative ads sprinkling other pages. Comic strips had fun with the season as well: the Freckles and His Friends comic pictured below reads “The day before Christmas." Click on images to enlarge.

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Thursday, December 21, 2017

A Letter to Santa, Circa 1927

90 years ago today, six-year-old Sheridanite, Byron Elmgren, wrote the letter below to Santa. Elmgren went on to become a renowed geologist and WWII fighter ace.

One our amazing volunteers found the letter in Mr. Elmgren's personal effects, donated to the Wyoming Room after his passing in 2016.


If you had a hard time deciphering young Mr. Elmgren's letter, you're not alone. Below is the best 'translation' we can muster:

Dear Santa,

I want a wagon and a few cars and [a] pair of boxing gloves and a pipe org [organ?] and 10$ and a few pen. and a grows see [sic] and a few box of palmas and a bow and arrow.

Very truly yours,

Byron Elmgren Merry Christmas


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Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Thanksgiving in Sheridan 1917


100 Years Ago in Sheridan, World War I and a sugar famine hit Thanksgiving pretty hard.Seats at several families' tables sat empty, awaiting a loved one's return from the front.


The sugar famine meant many cooks had to make due with hastily adjusted mincemeat pie recipes.

Then there was the turkey shortage. A decent sized, dressed bird cost upwards of six 1917 dollars--roughly $105 in our dollars--so "all but the plutocrats" had to make do with some serious downsizing.

Despite such hardships, generous donors made sure our soldiers abroad had hot turkey dinners with all the trimmings.


Sheridanites, ever resilient, persevered, giving thanks at morning and evening church services, rallying the Broncs to a 78-0 thrashing of Yellowstone County High at the afternoon football game. And those hardy Sheridan folk feasted indeed, just on rabbit or chicken as the main course--if one wasn't a plutocrat, that is.

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Thursday, November 16, 2017

A Feast for the Ages at the Sheridan Inn, Circa 1894

In 1894, the Sheridan Inn put our contemporary Thanksgiving feasts to shame with this glorious spread (apparently serving just about every living thing in a 20-mile radius). Click on the image to enlarge.

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Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Sheridan's 1917 Hallowe'en

100 years ago, trick-or-treating, such as we know it, hadn’t yet arrived on the scene but tricks raged in full force. Local police departments took yearly measures to quell youthful ruffians’ All Hallows Eve rebellions (outhouses, beware).

The tamer, more civilized sets held spooky parties for the kiddos and masquerade balls for mom and dad, of which Sheridan saw its fair share in 1917.

Halloween that year fell on a Wednesday. Arthur Dickson and his elementary put on a Halloween program that Halloween afternoon. The Doreas Society held a Halloween Social box supper at the Moseburgs that evening, while the Harrises of Soldier Creek put on a party with dancing and games; after “all the goblins and witches had been driven from the neighborhood,” the adults sat down for… “refreshments.”

The masquerade ball held at the Monarch Amusement Hall awarded prizes for the best masks and guests danced away to the “best music” from nine o’clock into the wee hours of the morning.


Apparently, Halloween ‘17 was a pretty quiet night, relatively speaking--mischief makers soaped all the windows in town. Things might’ve gotten a little more interesting, too, but for the rotten luck of a particularly plucky pack of preteens:

“It was a very delightful Hallowe’en prank to dress in boys clothes to attend a strictly girls party, but when intercepted on the way by city police and held at headquarters for the greater part of an hour it was not so amusing. It is the opinion of the victims that the officers who gathered in the bevy of maidens should not be among those who are to have their salaries raised.”

In retrospect, Sheridan’s All Hallows Eve a century ago was pretty tame, despite the highlights provided by local youth. That was soon to change in the coming years, which saw the gradual coming of treats instead of tricks, a nationwide Ouija board craze, and the influx of several psychics and mediums. Clippings from The Sheridan Enterprise.

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Saturday, October 7, 2017

Preserving Images of Now-Demolished Buildings

The downtown building that housed Presto Printing was recently demolished. Here are some photos of other buildings demolished in the recent past. Click on images to enlarge.

Central Middle School, demolished in 2005


The old city maintenance building, which at one time
 housed the city's street trolleys and The Plunge, 
an indoor pool, demolished in April 1995.


The Dean Witter building, once home to Sheridan's Mountain Bell 
offices, demolished in March 1995.


Linden school, demolished in spring of 1990.



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Thursday, October 5, 2017

Wyoming 4-H Centenary Photos


The photos below show 4-H through the ages in Sheridan and Johnson County. Click on pictures to enlarge. 

1931: parade float in Sheridan.


1932: The 4-H Home Furnishings Club has a picnic at the 
home of one of its members.

                            

1937: Style Revue featuring winners at the 
Tri-County 4-H Camp, Buffalo, Johnson County.


1932: The Skip-a-Long Club of Dayton
goes outside to sew.



1941: 4-H girls work on their stuffed toys in 
Monarch, Sheridan County.



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Thursday, September 14, 2017

The (In)Famous Smetty, Wyoming's Own Lake Monster

If you’re from Sheridan or Johnson County, you’ve heard spine-tingling tales of Lake DeSmet’s legendary denizen, ‘Smetty.’ Counting Native American stories, the lore of Smetty goes back centuries. Click on the images below to enlarge.

Image courtesy of John Meszaros,
from his blog, Cryptids State-by-State

One such legend tells of a band of Native Americans camped on the shores of DeSmet. During the night, they heard the strangest ruckus shattering the night’s silence. The next morning, the group’s champion swimmer shook off the previous night’s weirdness and took a dip in the inviting, cool water. All was hunky dory until he noticed something rising from the depths, at which he panicked, churning the water into a froth in an effort to reach shore. He slipped beneath the waves before his horrified friends, never to be seen again.

Hard evidence is sorely lacking for all but a handful of people who’ve borne witness to some strange goings-on in and around Father DeSmet’s namesake.

The Wyoming Room holds several Smetty accounts in the form of books and articles. One account finds three ranchers in 1892 who saw an “enormous shadow which closely resembled a sea serpent.”  Another, this one in 1924, tells of Frank Krout who claimed he saw  a creature resembling a “wet bay mare” rise in the middle of the lake.

And there was Edward Gillette, namesake of the town, who chronicled an incident involving the Barkey family in his 1925 book, Locating the Iron Trail. While fixing fence on the banks of DeSmet, the Barkeys bore witness to two sea serpents resembling “a long telephone pole with lard buckets attached” making a big fuss in the water.

Mrs. Oliver Townsend of Sheridan wrote of an incident involving one of her family’s ranchands when she was a little girl. The man, a Missouri native who spent every spare moment fishing, came charging back from his morning fishing trip, face blanched in panic. He had seen “a 30 to 40-foot long serpent, about a foot and a half thick, with a bony ridge on his back close to the head with resemblance to a horse’s mane.” The creature, according to the Missourian, “was of a brownish black in color and swam with his head held high out of the water with motions of a snake swimming.”

A different rancher, recalled Mrs. Townsend, was working his horses on the lake banks when they startled, rolling their eyes toward the lake, second later bolting away from the shore. The rancher then noticed a serpent swimming toward him and followed his horses’ suit forthwith.

In December 1911, 11-year-old Mary Olga Moore of the Meadow Ranch self-published a book (you can read more about her here) on the history and lore of Lake DeSmet for her family and friends. Her remarkably eloquent and mature hand weaved a dramatic telling of an encounter with the monster by none other than Father DeSmet himself:

“Suddenly, the silence was broken by the roar of many waters and the heretofore calm surface of Lake DeSmet was lashed into myriads of mighty waves, as a tawny body plowed its way through the seething, swirling waters.”


Moore also tells of a tragic Native American legend in which a mother, excited to show her baby’s swimming prowess to her newly returned, battle-gloried husband, set the babe in the water and ran downstream to catch him. Before his horror-stricken parents, an unknown beast took the babe in its jaws to a watery grave.

As you might imagine, the lore has generated its fair share of Smetty fan fiction.

In 1938, W.K. “Hi” Cole, manager of the Sheridan Flour Mill, took a satirical turn with his entry into Smetty lore. After hearing about a sighting earlier in the year by a witness he deemed credible, Cole decided to hunt the monster himself. With the help of the then managing editor of the Sheridan Press, Cole landed Smetty after a 10-hour fight only to see the carcass explode, littering the shore with “12 horseshoes, the wheel of a road grader, Father De Smet’s Bible, 13 Indian scalps, a backless bathing suits, a piece of track from the North and South railroad, and an outboard motor.” Ida McPherren, who chronicled the event, explained that the monster was fake but the explosion real, a riff on the legends old-timers passed on. Reading between the lines, could it have been that the local satirist embellished a story about creative fishing tactics? As in the kind with dynamite?

Click on the image below to enlarge.

The Sheridan Press, August 12, 1938.

Fan fiction and satire aside, sightings of something strange in Lake DeSmet persist, witnessed by earnest folk. In the early 1950s, recounted one Upton resident via Facebook, he and his aunt motored out to the middle of the lake on a still summer day bereft of other boats. Going for one of the big ones, he wound his pole back behind his shoulder to perfect his cast, but caught his aunt’s posterior instead. To make matters worse, a swell of unknown origin  crashed into the small boat, nearly depositing the boy and the woman into the lake. The two hastily beat a retreat  to shore, each resolving to never go near the unholy mere ever again.

A few years later, another account goes, a man’s ice fishing trip came to a halt when the monster burst through the lake’s frozen hide. The following day, people found a 50-yard rip in the three-foot thick ice. The latest account I could gather happened in the early 90s during a fishing derby. While setting up their camper, a pack of derby contestants noticed something large moving through the water, rise up, then descend beneath the waves.

Throughout the years, folks have described Smetty as a gargoyle, a flying fish with claws, an alligator-like creature, a giant seahorse, and as “a blob that upsets fisherman’s [sic] boats.” And  probably as scores other colorful chimeras.

Could Smetty lore be a simple as cases of mistaken identity? Tall tales? The product of overactive imaginations? Or could there really be a holdover from the Jurassic terrorizing the dark depths of the region’s most famous lake? What do you think? Chime in below and let us know!

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Friday, August 18, 2017

Snapshots of Sheridan, 1980


These photos depicting Coffeen Street before it was widened and the construction of the Sheridan College's Dome, respectively, come from our Dick Lenz collection. Click on the images to enlarge them.

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