Raynolds’ Pass
Posted by: Volcanoguy
N 44° 49.678 W 111° 28.068
12T E 463020 N 4963946
History sign about the history of Raynolds’ Pass.
Waymark Code: WMCRK8
Location: Montana, United States
Date Posted: 10/07/2011
Views: 4
History sign about the history of Raynolds’ Pass. The sign is located at a turnoff on U.S. Hwy. 287 at about mile point 1.1.
Text of Sign:
The low gap in the mountains on the sky line south of here is Raynolds’ Pass over the Continental Divide.
Jim Bridger, famous trapper and scout, guided an expedition of scientists through the pass in June of 1860. The party was led by Capt. W.F. Raynolds of the Corps of Engineers, U.S. Army. They came through from the south and camped that night on the Madison River near this point. Capt. Raynolds wrote, “The pass is . . . so level that it is difficult to locate the exact point at which the waters divide. I named it Low Pass and deem it to be one of the most remarkable and important features of the topography of the Rocky Mountains.”
Jim Bridger didn’t savvy road maps or air route beacons but he sure knew his way around.
Describe the area and history: The sign is located at a turnoff on U.S. Hwy. 287 at about mile point 1.1.
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