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Roosevelt Arch

Coordinates:45°1′46.1″N110°42′31.2″W / 45.029472°N 110.708667°W /45.029472; -110.708667
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Triumphal arch at the north entrance to Yellowstone National Park

Roosevelt Arch.

TheRoosevelt Arch is arusticatedtriumphal arch at the north entrance toYellowstone National Park inGardiner,Montana,United States. Constructed under the supervision of theUS Army atFort Yellowstone, itscornerstone was laid down byPresidentTheodore Roosevelt in 1903. The top of the arch is inscribed with a quote from theOrganic Act of 1872, the legislation which created Yellowstone, which reads: "For the Benefit and Enjoyment of the People".

The idea of the arch is attributed toHiram Martin Chittenden, who felt that the area surrounding Gardiner was not sufficiently impressive and required an emphatic statement of arrival at the famous park. Before 1903, trains brought visitors to Cinnabar, Montana, which was a few miles northwest of Gardiner, Montana, where people would transfer ontohorse-drawn coaches to enter the park. In 1903, theNorthern Pacific Railway finally completed its branch line to Gardiner. With the development of the Gardiner train station, the arch was proposed as part of the station ensemble.[1]

Construction

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The design of the Roosevelt Arch has been attributed toarchitectRobert Reamer, who designed the train depot, but documentation is inconclusive.[1] Construction of the arch began on February 19, 1903, and was completed on August 15, 1903, at a cost of aroundUS$10,000 (equivalent to about $350,000 in 2024). The archway was built at the north entrance, which was the first major entrance for Yellowstone and remains the only one of the park's five entrances to remain open year-round. President Roosevelt was visiting Yellowstone during construction and was asked to place thecornerstone for the arch, which then took his name. The cornerstone that Roosevelt laid on April 24, 1903 covered atime capsule that contains aBible, a picture of Roosevelt, local newspapers, and other items.[2] Several thousand people came to Gardiner for the dedication, includingJohn F. Yancey, who subsequently caught a chill and died in Gardiner as a result.[3]

Description

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The arch is constructed of hexagonal blocks ofcolumnar basalt, quarried locally. The arch is 52 feet (16 m) high. Two towers or buttresses flank the main archway, pierced by pedestrian passages with heavy wood doors.[4] The arch is flanked by curved walls of the same basalt stone, 12 feet (3.7 m) high, ending in short towers. The quote from the Organic Act is set above the arch in a rectangular slab of concrete. Similar panels flank the arch above the pedestrian doors, with "Yellowstone National Park" on the left and "Created by Act of Congress, March 1, 1872" on the right. Original ambitions for the design included a lake and waterfall, which could not be practically constructed in the semi-arid region and were never pursued. Instead, a small pond was built a little way in front of the arch, with unusual landscaping including sequoias from California. The pond and trees eventually disappeared.[5] The north entrance station was located just past the arch from 1921 until it was relocated a substantial distance to the south in 1961.[6]

The arch is listed as a contributing structure to theNorth Entrance Road Historic District, and was placed on theNational Register of Historic Places as part of the district in 2002.[7]

While motorists and pedestrians can visit the arch and travel under it, the main entrance route to Yellowstone directs through traffic to a route that bypasses the arch about 400 feet away. The change was made in a 2011 construction project, in response to traffic and pedestrian jams at the arch, whose opening is too small to accommodate two full lanes of traffic.[8]

Notes

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  1. ^abWhittlesey, Lee H.; Schullery, Paul (Summer 2003)."The Roosevelt Arch: A centennial history of an American icon".Yellowstone Science: 6. Retrieved18 April 2020.
  2. ^McMillion, Scott. "Roosevelt Arch turns 100."Bozeman Daily Chronicle, 24 April 2003.
  3. ^"John F Yancey's Death and the Roosevelt Arch".Outdoors Connected.[unreliable source?]
  4. ^Whittlesey, Schullery, p. 7
  5. ^Whittlesey, Schullery, pp. 8-9, 17
  6. ^Marcy Shivers Culpin; Christine Whitacre; Catherine Lentz; Lon Johnson (2001)."National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: North Entrance Road Historic District"(pdf). National Park Service.{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal= (help)
  7. ^Whittlesey, Schullery, pp. 20-21
  8. ^Daily, Cory Hatch, Jackson Hole (2011-10-15)."Yellowstone changes route for North Entrance".Jackson Hole News&Guide. Retrieved2025-08-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

See also

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Yellowstone National Park - Mammoth Hot Springs
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and history
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45°1′46.1″N110°42′31.2″W / 45.029472°N 110.708667°W /45.029472; -110.708667

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