In 1872,
Yellowstone became the nation’s – the world’s – first national park. The
concept was so new, Congress had no idea what to do with the park once it was
established. For twenty years, people continued to exploit and destroy the
features that Washington tried to protect, because there was no one who would
protect them. The army was finally called in in the 1880’s to protect the
thermal features and the animals. In 1916, the National Park Service was
established, and the army handed over control of the park in 1918.
Although
women married to National Park Service personnel had assisted their husbands
for years as unpaid help (like the military, it came with the territory), the
first woman to be “officially” employed by a park was
a California school teacher by the name of Claire Marie Hodges. She worked as a
seasonal naturalist, and was soon followed by two more women, one of whom would
make history in her own right.
Born
on October 2, 1901 at Mammoth Hot Springs in Yellowstone National Park, Jane
Marguerite Lindsley was destined to help shape the park’s history. She grew up
during Yellowstone’s “old army days,” to cannons booming at sunrise and sunset,
and yellow stagecoaches pulled by teams of mules taking visitors along the
bumpy roads in the park. Always adventurous and daring, Marguerite remembered
that her most memorable escapade as a youngster was the thrill of trying to
stay on a runaway Indian pony.
Because
there was no school at Mammoth for the children of army officers and park
employees, she was homeschooled by her mother though the eighth grade. At
fourteen, she entered prep school at Montana State College, and finished high
school in three years. She continued her studies there and she took four years
of pre-med work, majoring in bacteriology.
Marguerite
spent her school breaks in Yellowstone, but the summer between her junior and
senior year in college was very different. She was going to work as a ranger and
get paid for explaining the wonders of Yellowstone to park visitors. In June of
1921, newspapers around the country reported that Miss Marguerite Lindsley had
been chosen to teach tourists about Yellowstone, but more importantly that she
had been awarded the official title of National Park Ranger. Two other women
had been awarded the title previously, but Marguerite would become the first
woman, three years later, to attain a full-time ranger position in the park.
She
was described as an “honest-to-goodness
outdoor girl, and experienced horsewoman, and a master of the technique of camp
life,” and did not fit the profile of the average American girl. She herself once remarked that it must have
been a mistake that she was not born a boy. “I love the work of the rangers, and if I were a boy, I would make the
park service my life’s work. It was born in me, I know it.”
After
graduating college, she applied unsuccessfully to medical school in
Philadelphia, but was accepted into the Masters Program in Bacteriology. She
accepted a position with a research Laboratory, but soon realized that she
wanted to return to Yellowstone. “I could
almost smell the melting snow and growing things, and feel the thrill of an
early morning horseback ride.” So, she returned to Yellowstone, riding her
Harley Davidson on a 2600 mile cross-country trip, which she described as “next to the greatest escapade of my life.”
From
Harleys to horses, Marguerite made the park her permanent home. One summer, she
accompanied “Uncle Howard” Eaton on a three week horseback trip through
Yellowstone that included 200 horses and 125 people, 75 of which were tourists.
She offered to guide tourists through the Gibbon Paint Pot (now called Artists
Paint Pots) area, and broke through the crust of a thermal area where she found
herself in boiling clay up to her knee. This experience not only gave her third
degree burns, but also the nicknames “Geyser Peg” and “Paint Pot Peg.”
In
late December of 1925, she was offered her dream job: the position of permanent
ranger. She would assist the park service’s newly formed educational division.
In
1926, however, her dream was nearly shattered. Chief Inspector J.F. Garland,
Assistant to the Secretary of the Interior visited the park . His report
stated, “We do not believe that a woman
is physically suited for the arduous duties of a ranger and that the service,
which is already undermanned, suffers by the loss of what a qualified man in
her place could perform. It is recommended that women rangers not be employed….”
Lucky for her, Park Superintendent Horace
Albright ignored the recommendation.
Ironically,
among all this controversy of women rangers, an article was published about
Marguerite in the Christian Science
Monitor in 1927. “Lady Ranger ‘Makes
Good’ in Yellowstone Park Post, Only Girl among 24 men…” While her position
was stirring up Washington, her position as “full-fledged park ranger” was
making her a celebrity in the news. Obviously impressed by her qualifications
as a superb horsewoman, botanist, sometime attendant to orphan antelope, elk,
and bear cubs, and all-around outdoor woman, reporters contended that she “fully
deserved the commission which had been conferred to her.”
Marguerite
was not only adventurous and educated, but she was attractive as well. She had
many male admirers throughout the years, most of which she kept under her
hat. Literally. The inside of her
wide-brimmed ranger hat held the signatures of at least a dozen hopeful
suitors. A fellow ranger recalled that she “could
marry anybody she wanted. She could marry any of us.” More than likely, all
of her male suitors were well aware that marrying Marguerite also meant having
the spirit and vitality to keep up with her.
On
April 17, 1928, she did marry – Ranger Everett LeRoy (Ben Arnold), who was
stationed at Mammoth. She defied the expected conventions of the traditional
wedding day in her own signature style when she “dressed in a blue gown and
wore a corsage of roses.”
Because
she couldn’t keep her full-time position that would allow her to live in the
same location in the park as her new husband, she resigned from her position in
Mammoth and opted to work only seasonally.
For
the next 25 years, the couple lived and worked in Yellowstone. Marguerite died
on May 18, 1952. Throughout her more than fifty years of residency in the park,
life in Yellowstone never left her at a loss for entertainment and she firmly
believed that the park was the “country’s greatest wilderness playground.” For
her, it was a place where a young girl’s as well as a woman’s heart, soul, and
imagination could all take wing and soar above the conventions of the day.
3 comments:
What a great post, Peggy. She must have been an interesting woman with lots of energy. Nice to learn something about her.
Loved your post...it was like a testimony to Marguerite and I hope lots of people read it. Thank you so much for sharing. I'm so much smarter about lot of things thanks to this group. :)
Fascinating. Loved reading this post.
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