Friday, October 26, 2012
A R C H I V E S
Read---; THE DIFFICULT 1930`s
Thunder Butte
About Thunderbutte.com
Thunder Butte, in South Dakota, has featured prominently in my family's history since 1913. Also known as "Wakinyan Paha" to the Lakota, its religious and cultural significance to the Lakota goes back much further in time, still. Rising from the dry, rolling prairie grasslands in Ziebach County, in northwestern South Dakota, the butte is located on the Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation.
From the top of the butte, you can see for miles in every direction. There are not many people here, although the land is alive with the memory of those who walked here before us. Taking in the quiet of the plains as they reach to the horizon, you can well imagine the way the world was before we were here, and what it may look like long after we have moved on.
--Mike Crowley
Michael Crowley
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Previous Posts
•Babe Mansbridge - Champion Bronc Rider
•Walking Sam
•Neal Crowley
•Author of Thunder Butte Blog Will be in Faith
•Bigfoot Afoot on the Prairie?
•Dinosaur Bones -- a Key to Economic Development?
•Weather Hat Company Has a Thunder Butte Style
•Thunder Butte Earns a Place in Wikipedia
•Saddle Sore, A Poem
•Early Photo of Thunder Butte
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November 15, 2009
Crowley Ranch House at Thunder Butte Creek
Joseph Crowley on Horse with Crowley Ranch House at Rear, Probably 1926
Some weeks ago on a visit to California, I pulled my grandmother's old photo album out of a closet and uncovered a trove of old photos -- including a few of photos of the house my Dad grew up in on a leased spread several miles south or southwest of Thunder Butte on Thunder Butte Creek. The ranch was called the 7A- (or "Seven A Bar"), and was leased from R.L. Foster, Jr. Interestingly, I went looking for the place last July, but couldn't find any ranch roads or tracks that ran out that way. And, with three foot high hay and grass covering the country -- Gene Ulrich who is in his 90's said that it was the tallest he had ever seen it -- I wasn't wandering far from the visible ranch roads. Still, these photos bring to life a little bit what the country looked like and what the conditions were like where my Dad grew up.
The photo above has 1936 printed on the back, but more likely is from 1926. It shows my Uncle Joe, who would have been about 16 at the time, on top of a horse in front of the Crowley ranch house. The original photo is only 2 inches by 3 and the left hand side is entirely washed out. I attempted to bring out some more of the detail with PhotoShop, but you can see that when there isn't much to work with, this is about as good as the results get. The next photo, below, also is probably from the same period and shows a horse tied up in front of the house. The photographer's shadow is in the foreground. One interesting thing is that the photo shows packed earth built up around the base of the house. The purpose would have been to help keep the place warmer in the winter. Again, there isn't much detail to work with here, but if you click on the image to enlarge it, you can barely make out a cat, a child's wagon, and a dog directly in front of the house.
Crowley Ranch House, Probably in 1926
The next three photos are all dated from 1926. The first shows two horses tied up in front of the house. The next shows my grandmother (Mayme Crowley) and a tall cowboy, Glenn Tate, with a horse in front of the house. Glenn used to stay at the Crowley's place. A younger fellow, perhaps my Uncle Neal or Joe, is at the left in the background. The last photo shows what looks like my Aunt Cece chopping wood in front of an outhouse. Cece would have been only eleven in 1926, and it looks like another kid is sitting in the foreground facing away from the camera -- this is probably my Dad, who would have been five.
Crowley Ranch House with Horse Tied Up Out Front, 1926
Mayme Crowley and Glenn Tate with Horse at Crowley House, 1926
Possibly Cecelia Crowley Chopping Wood in Front of Outhouse, 1926
--Mike Crowley
Mike Crowley Sunday, November 15, 2009
1 Comments:
Hello,
I tried to make a comment previously but don't know if it worked. My great grand father was Wes Walenta. I read a portion of your blog to my dad, Don Walenta. He rembers, I assume your father Gene Crowley. He would be open to chatting with you.
You can email me at suzwalenta@yahoo.com
Anonymous, at November 17, 2009 6:30 PM
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