MOUNTAIN MAN MEMORIAL
JOHN COLTER
Born and raised in Virginia in the 1770s, he became a valued member of the Lewis and Clarke Expedition from 1803 to 1806. Colter remained in the mountains to trap and explore and was among the first American “Free Trappers” in the Rocky Mountains, along with Joseph Dickson and Forrest Hancock in 1806 – 1807. He was the first to explore the Big Horn Basin, the Yellowstone, and the Grand Teton Regions. During his great journey of discovery, he found “Colter’s Hell” west of Cody, Wyoming. Captured by the Blackfeet in 1803, he was forced to run for his life. Outdistancing the entire tribe for seven miles he survived, naked and weaponless, to become a legend in his own lifetime. John Colter was the first true “Mountain Man.” He died of disease in 1813, unheralded but not forgotten.
JIM BRIDGER
James Bridger was a mountain man, hunter, trapper, fur trader, emigrant guide, and Army scout. James Bridger was born in Richmond, Virginia in 1804 and moved to St. Louis, Missouri in 1812. He served as a blacksmith’s apprentice from 1818 to 1822 and came west with the 1822 Ashley-Henry Expedition. He discovered the Great Salt Lake in 1824 and visited what is now Yellowstone Park in 1830. In 1833 he became a full partner in the fur trading firm of Sublette, Fraeb, Gervais, Bridger, and Fitzpatrick. Anticipating the influx of immigrants, he established Ft. Bridger to resupply and repair the wagon trains. Jim served as a guide and scout for the Army until 1868. After his discharge, “Old Gabe” retired to his farm in Missouri where he died on July 17, 1881.