January 24, 2022
Wyoming Fact &
Fiction
The Strange Case of
Hiram Scott – We live in eastern Wyoming, and for
us, a trip to Scottsbluff, Nebraska, is an almost weekly affair. It's only an
hour away, and the closest Walmart, Target, Home Depot, and Menards are all
located there. Statistically, 90% of Americans live within 10 miles of a
Walmart store. Humm – we live 62 miles from our closest. That must mean we live
in a nearly perfect place. I agree.
The city of
Scottsbluff is named after Hiram Scott and his time in Wyoming was both tragic
and historic. Scott had come west with General Ashley's party and served as a
Captain under Colonel Leavenworth.
In 1827 Scott and his
group went back on the North Platte River for a downstream trip to Saint Louis when
their canoe overturned. Among the group's losses were all of their ammunition –
too wet to ever be of use again. With the ability to hunt lost, the men lived
on whatever berries, roots, and shoots they could find. It didn't take long
before Scott was ill. We could speculate on why, but lack of food or bad food
would lead the list of possibilities.
In the movies, trappers
are mostly displayed as loyal and fateful to their companions. Not sure if that
was ever true, but it certainly was not in this case. Hiram Scott was thought
to be on his death bed and was abandoned by his companions near the site of
what would become Fort Laramie. His men, meanwhile, started their long walk
east toward civilization.
The following summer,
the men who abandoned Scott were back in the west and found what they
identified as Scott's remains near present-day Scottsbluff, Nebraska. Fort
Laramie is nearly 50 miles from Scottsbluff. According to Washington Irvin,
Scott had crawled and stumbled for days to reach where he died. Fort Laramie last summer - still looking good.
Wyoming Trivia – two questions today
Q1 – Fort Laramie was the third name for the famous post. Can
you name one of its earlier names?
Q2 – Fort Laramie was located on two famous rivers – name them?
Q3 – Wyoming became a state in 1890. What year did neighboring
Nebraska become a state? Leeway on this one – within five years.
Answers
Q1 – Fort William & Fort John
Q2 – North Platte River – Laramie River
Q3 - 1867
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