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Title
View looking S.E. up the valley of the Lamar Tiver with the Yellowstone Park Buffalo Ranch near at hand. On out right, rising from the valley, we see the long slopes of Specimen Ridge, where the Fossil Forest is to be found. In the far distance up the valley are some of the peaks of the Absaroka Range. The Buffalo Ranch itself is an interesting place with its big yards enclosed by massive fences 8 and 10 ft. high built of pine logs, where the buffalo are confined in winter and at other times when for any reason it is desired to separate some of the animals from the herd of about 900 which live in the Park, normally in their native wild state. The residence of Mr. Lacombe, the manager of the Buffalo Ranch, is the house which we see farthest to the right with a flag pole in front of it. "Bob" Lacombe is a typical Western ranchman who is quite in his element looking after the Buffalo Ranch. Sometimes he has as many as 24 men working for him at the ranch, particularly in summer when hay is being cut in the river valley for the sustenance of the buffalo during the long months of the winter. The Buffalo Ranch at that season is isolated place in which to live. Snow shoes are most convenient mode of traveling for the splendid Park highways are buried in snow many feet deep. The nearest inhabited place then is Mammoth Hot Springs, nearly 30 miles distant over the mountains to the westward. At Mammoth throughout the winter there is a little colony of about 100 people, most of them Park Rangers and their families living in
Creator
Unknown Hansen
Contributor
Gifford M. Mast
Date Created and/or Issued
1927
Publication Information
Keystone View Company
Contributing Institution
UC Riverside, California Museum of Photography
Collection
Keystone-Mast Collection
Rights Information
REQUIRED CREDIT LINE MUST STATE: Keystone-Mast Collection, UCR/California Museum of Photography, University of California at Riverside. Please contact UCR/California Museum of Photography for information about the copyright status of this item. Some materials in these collections may be protected by the U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.). In addition, the reproduction, and/or commercial use, of some materials may be restricted by gift or purchase agreements, donor restrictions, privacy and publicity rights, licensing agreement(s), and/or trademark rights. Distribution or reproduction of materials protected by copyright beyond that allowed by fair use requires the written permission of the copyright owners. To the extent other restrictions apply, permission for distribution or reproduction from the applicable rights holder is also required. Responsibility for obtaining permissions, and for any use rests exclusively with the user.
Description
View looking S.E. up the valley of the Lamar Tiver with the Yellowstone Park Buffalo Ranch near at hand. On out right, rising from the valley, we see the long slopes of Specimen Ridge, where the Fossil Forest is to be found. In the far distance up the valley are some of the peaks of the Absaroka Range. The Buffalo Ranch itself is an interesting place with its big yards enclosed by massive fences 8 and 10 ft. high built of pine logs, where the buffalo are confined in winter and at other times when for any reason it is desired to separate some of the animals from the herd of about 900 which live in the Park, normally in their native wild state. The residence of Mr. Lacombe, the manager of the Buffalo Ranch, is the house which we see farthest to the right with a flag pole in front of it. "Bob" Lacombe is a typical Western ranchman who is quite in his element looking after the Buffalo Ranch. Sometimes he has as many as 24 men working for him at the ranch, particularly in summer when hay is being cut in the river valley for the sustenance of the buffalo during the long months of the winter. The Buffalo Ranch at that season is isolated place in which to live. Snow shoes are most convenient mode of traveling for the splendid Park highways are buried in snow many feet deep. The nearest inhabited place then is Mammoth Hot Springs, nearly 30 miles distant over the mountains to the westward. At Mammoth throughout the winter there is a little colony of about 100 people, most of them Park Rangers and their families living in...
Type
image
Format
Keystone photo print 7.18 in. x 4.18 in.
Identifier
http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/kt387013qg
1996.0009.KU83846
Language
English
Subject
Facilities
Parks
National parks and reserves
Agricultural facilities
Ranches
Nature
Land
Valleys
Lamar River
Place
North and Central America
United States
Wyoming
Yellowstone National Park

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