Born Jan 12, 1840 to Jonathan C. and Rebecca Wheeler Wright in Nauvoo, Illinois, Amos Russell Wright lived an adventurous and colorful life. Raised as a “Mormon,” as members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints were commonly… Read More >
It’s kind of a chicken and egg question, and to be honest, we don’t know the answer… “raspberries” and “milkshakes” have been the perfect combination in Bear Lake longer than most people can remember. All we know is that eating… Read More >
Born on October 10, 1801, in Crab Orchard, Kentucky, Thomas Lane “Peg-Leg” Smith was one of the most colorful characters in the early 1800s. He operated a trading post near Bear Lake, for years, near the present community of Dingle,… Read More >
One of the Old West’s most storied personalities was the outlaw “Butch Cassidy”, whose real name was Robert Leroy Parker. In the late 1800s, Cassidy, along with his partner, Harry Longbaugh, also known as the Sundance Kid, and other members… Read More >
The Bear Lake region contains many community-service minded groups and individuals, dedicated to help when needed. One such group, known as the Bear Lake Rangers, was always prepared to act when situations arose. For years, 40-50 hardy-spirited Rangers rode in… Read More >
Born in St. Charles, Idaho, in the Bear Lake Valley, in what was then the Idaho Territory in 1867, Borglum became famous for creating the monumental presidents’ heads at Mount Rushmore, South Dakota. Born into a Mormon polygamous family, his… Read More >
James Felix Bridger was born on March 17, 1804 in Richmond Virginia. He received no formal education and was illiterate all his life. After moving to St. Louis, he was orphaned at age 13, and apprenticed to a blacksmith.… Read More >
Jesse James was born September 5, 1847 in Clay county, the “Little Dixie” area of western Missouri, near present-day Kearney. James became a Civil War guerilla, an American outlaw, bank and train robber and leader of the notorious James-Younger Gang.… Read More >
Folks here don’t talk much about Big-Foot, Yeti, or even the famous Loch Ness Monster. For better or worse, it’s the Bear Lake Monster that captures most of the attention around Bear Lake. Fact or fiction? Reality or myth? You… Read More >
Nothing is more important to the Idaho economy than water.” At one time, it did seem inconceivable that the high desert of Idaho could bloom with crops. But Minidoka Dam and other reclamation projects made settlement and prosperity possible. The… Read More >
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