John Day Fossil Beds
Administrative History
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
Historians, like other subject matter specialists, are trained to
bring context and evaluation to the forefront of their work. It is
therefore tempting to use an administrative history project as a way to
expound on broad themes, such as agency policy in paleontological areas
or even changing perceptions of what constitutes a national park area.
The fairly narrow scope of administrative history, which generally
confines narratives to summarizing the specifics of certain issues,
often precludes treatment of more conceptual topics. Nevertheless,
National Park Service-sponsored administrative history has, at times,
provided guideposts for future scholarship by citing literature of a
general nature. Examples such as Hal Rothman's bibliographic essay in
his history of Bandelier National Monument (Santa Fe: USDI-NPS, SWR,
Cultural Resources Center, 1988) or David Louter's list of references
concerning Craters of the Moon National Monument (Seattle: USDI-NPS,
PNR, Cultural Resources Division, 1992) come to mind as having covered
that ground already, so the reader is referred to those works for more
general literature about national monuments.
Well over half of the source material that supports this
administrative history originates from the monument's central files and
its library. This helped to minimize the time and expense associated
with locating documents housed in one or several branches of the
National Archives. Part of the reason why on site records are so
complete is the fact that the monument has been only recently
established. Much of the chapter devoted to the park campaign, however,
was dependent on source material compiled at the NPS group office in
Klamath Falls. When that office closed in 1982, these documents were
sent unsolicited to park headquarters in John Day. Ben Ladd retained
them there until this project began a decade later, thereby eliminating
the need for what could have been a frustrating and expensive search
through less specific files housed in one or more branches of the
National Archives.
Where the group office files were virtually complete for the period
from 1965 to 1975, state park records covered a larger span of time.
While sometimes fragmentary, the files in Salem could be combined with
source material originating from John C. Merriam or Robert W. Sawyer.
Merriam's voluminous correspondence deserves further examination, not
only with respect to his role at the John Day Fossil Beds, but also
because he played an important role in the history of certain national
and state parks.
A series of relatively informal oral history interviews contributed
to the writing of this administrative history. Larry Merriam assisted
with the search for material concerning his grandfather, while also
providing vital clues to locating a transcript of the Senate
subcommittee authorization hearing which represented the monument
proposal's final hurdle. Three of the principals during the park
campaign--Dave Talbot, Jack Steiwer, and Gordon Glass--consented to
extended interviews which gave the chapter on that subject additional
bulk. Ernie Borgman and Ben Ladd likewise added much to the chapter on
the formative years of NPS management in the John Day Basin. The final
three chapters benefited from conversations with Ted Fremd, Jim Morris,
Kim Sikoryak, and Ken Till because they supplied needed context for
areas where source material was sometimes difficult to interpret.
Readers should note that no attempt to list scientific literature
has been made, since almost 6,000 manuscripts are germane to the
organisms, events, and processes preserved in the John Day Basin. What
follows is a sampling of material pertinent to the area's human history
which relates in some way to establishment or administration of the
monument.
Published sources
Buwalda, John P. "Earth History of a Portion of the Pacific
Northwest," pp. 695-710 in Cooperation in Research. Washington,
D.C.: Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1938.
Chaney, Ralph W. "John Campbell Merriam (1869-1945)," pp. 381-387,
in Yearbook of the American Philosophical Society, 1945.
Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1946.
Condon, Thomas. "The Rocks of the John Day Valley," Overland
Monthly 6:5 (May 1871), pp. 393-398.
Cox, Thomas R. "Conservation by Subterfuge: Robert W. Sawyer and the
Birth of the Oregon State Parks," pp. 47-56 in The Park Builders: A
History of State Parks in the Pacific Northwest. Seattle: University
of Washington Press, 1988.
Fremd, Ted. "'I've Seen the Miocene' in Central Oregon," Park
Science 12:3 (Summer 1992), pp. 12-13.
Fussner, F. Smith (ed.). Glimpses of Wheeler County's past
Portland: Binford and Mort, 1975.
Jackson, Royal G. "Oral History Adds Cultural Texture at John Day,"
Park Science 3:3 (Spring 1983), pp. 10-l1.
Jones, Connie H. "Forty Million Years of History at Hancock,"
OMSI Magazine 3 (May 1988), pp. 4-5.
Merriam, John C. "The John Day Fossil Beds," Harper's Monthly
Magazine 102:610 (March 1901), pp. 581-590.
-----, "A Contribution to the Geology of the John Day Basin,"
University of California Bulletin of the Department of Geology
2:9 (April 1901), pp. 269-314.
Merriam, Lawrence C. (Jr.) Oregon's Highway Park System,
1921-1989: An Administrative History. Salem: Oregon Parks and
Recreation Department, 1992.
Miller, Loye H. "The John Day Basin of Oregon," pp. 104-129, in
Lifelong Boyhood: Recollections of a Naturalist Afield. Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1950.
Oberson, Viola L. "Alonzo Wesley "Lon" Hancock (1884-1961): a
profile," Oregon Geology 41:12 (December 1979), pp. 187-191.
Orr, Elizabeth L. and William N. "A History of Geologic Study in
Oregon," pp. 9-20, in Geology of Oregon. Dubuque, Iowa:
Kendall-Hunt, 1992.
Ray, Verne F. "Tribal Distribution in Eastern Oregon and Adjacent
Regions," American Anthropologist 40:3 (July-September 1938), pp.
384-395.
Sternberg, Charles H. "Expedition to the John Day River in 1878,"
pp. 170-204 in The Life of a Fossil Hunter. San Diego: Jensen
Printing, 1931.
Stock, Chester. "Oregon's Wonderland of the Past--The John Day,"
Scientific Monthly 63 (July 1946), pp. 59-65.
Toepel, Kathryn A., et al. Cultural Resource Overview of BLM
Lands in North- Central Oregon. Eugene: University of Oregon,
Department of Anthropology, 1979.
Willlingham, William F. "Family and Community in the Eastern Oregon
Frontier," Oregon Historical Quarterly 95:2 (Summer 1994), pp.
176-204.
Zucker, Jeff, et al. Oregon Indians: Culture, History, and
Current Affairs--An Atlas and Introduction. Portland: Oregon
Historical Society Press, 1987.
Unpublished sources
Davis, Wilbur A. Survey of Historic and Prehistoric Resources in the
John Day Fossil Beds National Monument. Report CX-9000-6-0058, May 1977.
Fremd, Theodore, et al. John Day Basin Paleontology Field Trip Guide
and Road Log for 1994 Society of Vertebrate Paleontology Annual Meeting,
Seattle. John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, 94-1.
Langille, W.A. John Day Fossil Beds - A State Park of the
Yesterdays. Oregon State Parks mimeographed handout dated May 12, 1948.
-----, The Painted Hills - A Unique State Park of Wheeler County.
Oregon State Parks mimeographed handout dated November 4, 1948.
Luxenberg, Gretchen A. Historic American Buildings Survey
documentation, James Cant Ranch, HABS No. OR-142, June 1988.
Rensberger, John M. Paleontologic Information, John Day Fossil Beds
National Monument. Report dated February 1976.
Shotwell, J. Arnold. A Report to the National Park Service on the
Significance, History of Investigation, and Salient Paleontological
Features of the Upper John Day Basin, Wheeler and Grant Counties,
Oregon. Report dated July 20, 1967.
Sikoryak, Jane A. Review of Paleontological Specimens and Related
Records from the Vicinity of John Day Fossil Beds National Monument. A
Report Submitted to the Pacific Northwest Region, National Park Service,
April 9, 1988.
Steggell, Norm, et al. Blue Basin Cultural Resource Inventory in the
Sheep Rock Unit, John Day Fossil Beds, Grant County, Oregon. Report
identified as MNF/640- 81002, October 1981.
Toothman, Stephanie S. James Cant Ranch Historic District.
Nomination to the National Register of Historic Places, June 1984.
Manuscript materials
Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. John C.
Merriam Papers, collection no. C-A 284, C-B 970, and MSS 71/100.
John Day Fossil Beds National Monument. Archives portion of the
museum collection. Other material housed in central files or the park
library.
Knight Library, University of Oregon, Eugene. Robert W. Sawyer
Papers, collection no. Ax 100.
Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. John C. Merriam Papers.
Oregon Parks and Recreation Department, Salem. Archive files and
drawings related to the three former state parks.
System Support Office, Columbia-Cascades Cluster [formerly Pacific
Northwest Regional Office], National Park Service, Seattle. Deed
acquisition files, Lands Division.
Newspapers
John Day Blue Mountain Eagle
Klamath Falls Herald and News
Medford Mail Tribune
Portland Oregonian
Portland Oregon Journal
Interviews
T.J. "Jeff" Adams, 9/10/92, telephone
Ernest Borgman, 7/28/92, Klamath Falls
Daron Dierks, 7/21/92, Dayville
Camille Evans, 7/23/92, Cant Ranch
Ted Fremd, 7/21/92, 3/3/93, and 7/24/95, Cant Ranch
Gordon Glass, 7/22/92 and 7/24/92, John Day
James Hammett, 7/24/95, Cant Ranch
Ben Ladd, 5/19/92, John Day, 2/2/95 and 2/28/95, Crater Lake
Lawrence C. Merriam, Jr., 11/26/88 and 2/7/94, Corvallis
Jim Morris, 5/21/92 and 3/3/93, Cant Ranch
John Rutter, 5/13/93, telephone
Jane Sikoryak, 1/27/93, telephone
Kim Sikoryak, 1/26/93, telephone
Don Spalding, 6/3/92, telephone
J.P. "Jack" Steiwer, 3/1/93, Fossil
David G. Talbot, 4/2/93, telephone
Ken Till, 7/23/92 and 7/24/95, Cant Ranch
http://www.nps.gov/joda/adhi/adhib.htm
Last Updated: 30-Apr-2002
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