Episode 45 | The History of Grand Teton National Park (Part 1)
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Grand Teton National Park is one of those places that stays with you long after you’ve visited. The peaks are stunning, the wildlife is abundant, and the lakes and rivers tie it all together. Still, as iconic as the Tetons are, the story behind the park is a lot more complicated—and a lot more interesting—than most people realize.
Old School Hertiage Solutions founder and principal and podcast guest Katherine Wonson. (Photo Katherine Wonson)
Before it became a national park, this landscape was shaped by Indigenous communities, early fur traders, ranchers, homesteaders, prospectors, conservationists, and some pretty heated debates about land, tourism, and the future of the valley itself.
Thanks for tuning in to Part 1 of our History of Grand Teton National Park series.
Joining us today is Katherine Wonson, a historian specializing in the history of Teton Valley, Wyoming. She first dipped her toe into the history of the region as the director of the National Park Service’s Western Center for Historic Preservation and the cultural resources branch lead for Grand Teton National Park. Now, Katherine works as the founder and principal of Old School Heritage Solutions in Jackson where she supports restoration and preservation projects to keep history alive.
On this episode we’ll focus on the land and people before it was a national park, including Indigenous connections, John Colter, homesteaders, and more.
Alright, let’s learn all about the rocky history of Grand Teton National Park!
The Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem is the land of 49+ Indigenous Tribes who maintain current and ancestral connections to the lands, waters, wildlife, plants, and more.
Voices of Greater Yellowstone was created by the Greater Yellowstone Coalition, a conservation nonprofit dedicated to working with people to protect the lands, waters, and wildlife of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, now and for future generations.
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Podcast Artwork > Rachel Dunlap Art
Music > Redwood Trail by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
Thumbnail Photo > USGS
Thanks for listening in!
-Emmy Reed, Senior Digital Communications Associate (Bozeman, Montana)