Name: East Gros Ventre Butte

 

County: Teton

 

Authority Name:

 

Latitude: 432905N

 

Longitude: 1104647W

 

Elevation: 7411 Feet

 

 

Feature Type: Summit

 

Origin of Name: Located on the outer highlands to the east of Jackson Hole. It is a long ridge standing out prominently from the floor of the basin and extends several mile from north to south. The tops of these buttes represent the old floor of the valley of Jackson Hole before the rest of it was worn down to the present level. 

            There are at least three stories connected with name. Gros Ventre is a French word meaning big vent of opening. Whether the mountains and river were named after the Indians or vice versa is a question. According to Marie M. Fraser in the “Old Trails of Wyoming,” the legend runs as follows:

            There were two tribes of the Gros Ventre Indians. One was a poor wandering tribe that was nearly always hungry. They often went around begging for food. Of course they used sign language. Their way of saying that they were hungry was to run their hands over their stomachs. The French knew the signs but the Indians they saw look big and fat to them so they decided that the sign meant “big stomach” instead of “empty stomach.” Therefore they named the Indians the Gros Ventres.

            The other Gros Ventre tribe was not related to this poor one. Their tribal sign or mark was three signs around their waist. To say it in sign language an Indian of this tribe stretched three fingers on each had around his waist line. This sign also was wrongly interpreted by the French trappers so they named this tribe too; the Gros Ventres.

            According to the second version, the French traders and trappers saw the great gap which the river cuts through the mountains and called it the Gros Ventre, meaning big or great opening. The high range of mountains was given the same name. The tribes of Indians roamed over the Gros Ventre country and were called the Gros Ventres after the river and the mountains.

Source: WPA

 

Other Names:

 

Alternative Spellings:

 

Picture:

 

Oral History:

 

 


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