Fox Creek Patrol Cabin
The U.S. Army constructed backcountry cabins and snowshoe cabins to provide
facilities for troops patrolling for poachers. Typically these were about 16
miles apart-a day's travel. The four backcountry cabins surviving from this
period are still used by the National Park Service for backcountry patrols
(visitor safety, law enforcement, poaching), to temporarily house researchers,
and as visitor contract stations. Located in remote parts of the park that are
accessible only by foot and horseback, these cabins serve as welcome refuges
for crews where they can rest and get out of the cold, rain, and snow.
Each cabin is rectangular in the "
Rocky
Mountain" style which is
exemplified by the entrance and covered porch with a gable end. This contrasts
with eastern and midwestern log cabins where the entrance is often found on a
side wall and the covered entry porch incorporates a shallower pitched shed
roof. The roofs are cedar shingles, but were originally sod. Foundations
(floors) were originally dirt, but have been replaced with concrete. Doors are
on the south side. The cabins rest on concrete foundations with the sill logs
directly on the foundation.