| Lakota
Indian legends speak of a hole in the Black Hills that blows air.
This is a sacred place for their people. The tipi rings near the
present day elevator building at Wind Cave National Park indicate
that Indians of the area knew about the small natural entrance that
Tom and Jesse Bingham claimed to have discovered in 1881.
Jesse
reported that it was the sound of the wind coming from the entrance
that caught his attention. According to legend he and Tom looked
into the hole and the wind coming out was strong enough to blow
Tom's hat off of his head. Aside from reports that the Binghams
returned to show others this wind phenomenon, the first reported
entry into the cave was by Charlie Crary shortly after it was discovered
in 1881. Later in the fall of 1881, Frank Hebert, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse
Girelle and the two Cole girls spent a day exploring the cave.
Other explorations were reported in the local newspapers and by
1887 the cave was said to be 3 miles long and "no bottom found."
Several
mining claims were filed and abandoned during those early days,
but in 1890 the South Dakota Mining Company had control of the area.
Through R.B. Moss, the Mining Company employed J.D. McDonald to
manage the property for them. It is with the arrival of the McDonalds
that the era of serious exploration of Wind Cave began. For the
first time guided tours were conducted through the cave, trail improvements
were initiated, and cave specimens were removed to be sold.
Our understanding
of the early history and exploration is based largely on a diary
kept by J.D. McDonald's son, Alvin.
In his diary Alvin refers to trips
made into the cave for exploration, to enlarge passages, to collect
specimens, and to conduct tours. Prior to Alvin's time there were
probably about a dozen rooms in the cave that had been named. Early
visitors spent most of their time in the network of passages near
the cave entrance and exploration had not gone much farther than
the area just below the Devil's Lookout. Alvin's exploration of
the cave was rather systematic. He gave names to rooms, routes,
and interesting features, he estimated distances, and through his
diary he kept a record of explorations.
Alvin and his older brother, Elmer, tried hard
to understand the cave. Alvin, according to his diary, soon found
that "In Wind Cave, whenever you find a passage that has wind
in it, it shows the passage to be of some importance." He also
understood the huge task he was undertaking. Early in 1891 he reported
"...have given up the idea of finding the end of Wind Cave."
In the spring
of 1891, the McDonald family was busy making improvements in the
cave and in general gearing up for the tourist season. J.D. McDonald
was making weekly visits to Hot Springs to report to the local paper
on the progress of developments at the cave. It seems that talk
of the cave's potential caught the interest of John Stabler and
early in 1892 McDonald reportedly sold between 1/3 and 1/2 interest
in the cave to Stabler creating the Wonderful Wind Cave Improvement
Company. Stabler was also given the right to build a hotel near
the cave entrance. He and his family joined McDonald and his family
in exploring the cave.
To publicize
the cave, J.D. McDonald traveled to Iowa to display cave minerals
at the Ottumwa Coal Palace and the Sioux City Corn Palace. During
the summers of 1892 and 1893 two large publicity stunts made local
headlines. One was a petrified man "found" near Wind Cave
and promptly displayed in the cave. The other was the arrival of
Professor Paul Alexander Johnstone. Johnstone, "a world renown
mind reader", ventured into the cave blindfolded to search
for and eventually find a pin secreted there by local townsfolk.
In
1893 J.D. McDonald traveled to Chicago to display cave minerals
at the Columbian Exposition. In November, Alvin left Hot Springs
to join his father in Chicago. He was to "assist in selling
cave specimens" at the Exposition. He was ill when he returned
from the trip and died about a month later. A newspaper report stated
that he had died from typhoid fever. He was 20 years old.
During
the next few years ownership of the cave became a major question. Solving the
question was incredibly complicated.
One of the problems
was a lack of a government survey of the area which made possession
of a clear title almost impossible. Mining and agricultural (land)
claims provided only a small degree of protection to the owner as
they were dependent upon proofs of improvement and/or valuable mineral
deposits. In 1893, the South Dakota Mining Company brought suit
against the McDonalds and Stablers for restitution of property and
premises. But by this time both the McDonalds and Stablers had filed
homesteading claims around and over the entrance to the cave. Though
the case was in court for several years, no decision was reached.
Probably one
of the reasons no decision was reached was because the South Dakota
Mining Company was having financial problems. Peter Folsom was one
person to whom they owed money. In 1895 he filed a mining lien on
Wind Cave and in the fall a court confirmed his purchase of the
mining rights to the cave through the South Dakota Mining Company's
default of payments due him.
It is unclear
why, but early in 1897 the McDonalds and Stablers dissolved their
partnership. The Stablers joined forces with Peter Folsom and contested
the McDonalds' prior claim to the cave. J.D. McDonald and his son,
Elmer, filed separate suits against the Stabler/Folsom group. A
temporary injunction against the McDonalds was issued by the court
in May.
In an attempt
to strengthen their claim Folsom and Stabler incorporated the Black
Hills Wind Cave Company. By late April 1898, the two parties had
submitted all of their evidence to the land office in Rapid City.
The son of one
of the lawyers in the case between the McDonalds and the Stabler/Folsom
group later wrote about the problems of the parties involved: "The
usual testimony with reference to the agricultural occupation and
improvement, and efforts to show mineral values were made; but there
was the greatest difficulty on the part of any party to show any
substantial facts in support of their right of possession or title.
Hardly a spear of grass could be offered in evidence by the McDonalds,
and not a nugget of gold or any assay certificate could be shown
by the Stablers. It was apparent from the start of the proceedings
that each party was hoping to prevail by reason of the weakness
of his opponent's position..."
Continued litigation
led to an appeal from the land office to the Department of the Interior
and the government's attention was drawn to the cave. Reports filed
by C.W. Green, Lucius Boyd, and Professor Paxton convinced the Department
of the Interior that the cave was of sufficient size and interest
to be reserved as a National Park. On January 16, 1900 a temporary
withdrawal was made on the lands and on January 9, 1903 President
Teddy Roosevelt signed the bill creating Wind Cave National Park.
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