Name: Leigh Creek
County: Teton
Authority Name:
GNIS Entry
Longitude: 1104514W
Latitude: 434853N
Legal Description:
Elevation: 6883/2098
(ft/m)
Feature Type: Stream
Origin of Name:
Creek, Grand Teton National Park, Teton County ... flowing easterly into Leigh Lake.
Source: Decisions, 1890-1932
Named in honor of Richard Leigh (Beaver Dick), a guide with the Hayden Geological Survey expedition of 1872. He had his permanent home in Teton Valley, Idaho, but spent a good deal of his time in Jackson Hole. Leigh was an Englishman who said he first came to Idaho in 1840. He is of particular interest as a sort of connecting link between the early trappers and the present day inhabitants, that is the old timers who were among the first settlers in Jackson Hole. There was a gap of about forty years between the waning of the trapping industry in the late 1840's and the coming of the first permanent settlers in 1883 when there was noone in Jackson Hole except wandering Indians or a prospector or a lone trapper like Leigh. Leigh knew many of the early trappers and told the old timers much of interest about that period of the country. The latter say that Leigh was a quiet, intelligent well educated man. He was twice married, both times to Indian women. The first with her several children died of smallpox in Teton Valley, Idaho. The second, after whom Jenny Lake was named, married a man named Weaver after the death of Beaver Dick and lived near Jackson. She had a tough time, too, having to make moccasins to support herself. Leigh is said to have been the first white man to have a regular marriage ceremony performed when taking Indian woman as wives.
Source: WPA
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1:24000 Quadrangle: Mount Moran
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