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Medicine Bow National Forest

Name: Medicine Bow National Forest

 

County: Albany

 

Authority Name: Medicine Bow National Forest (Wyo.)   

 

GNIS Entry

 

Longitude:  1061503W

Latitude: 411501N 

 

Legal Description:

 

Elevation: 9882/3012

(ft/m)

 

Feature Type: Forest

 

Origin of Name:

The name of Medicine Bow is derived from the Indians. A tradition says that the northern tribes traveled annually to the foot of the Medicine Bow Mountains for the purpose of procuring a variety of ash timber from which they made their bows. With the Indians, anything that is excellent for the purpose for which it is intended is called Good Medicine. The locality was known as the place where they could procure good medicine bows, hence Medicine Bow Mountains, Medicine Bow River, and the town of Medicine Bow naturally follows.  

Source: WPA

 

Located in the Snowy Range area west of Laramie, Medicine Bow Peak has an altitude of 11,939 feet. On the summit which forms one flank on the peak stands the primary fire lookout tower of the Medicine Bow National Forest. To this location the Indians came great distances to obtain the unusually straight timber of that part of the region from which to fashion their bows and arrows. It was considered “good medicine” to use that timber for the making of their weapons – “good medicine bows”.  

Source: WPA

 

Indians came a great distance to obtain the unusually straight timber of that part of the region from which to fashion their bows and arrows. It was considered good medicine to use that timber for the making of their weapons; they said, "Good medicine bows."

Source: Annals 14(3)

 

The little town of Medicine Bow is well known to readers of Owen Wister's "Virginian" as one of the places where the cowboys played their laughable pranks, and the name of the novel has been taken by the hotel near the station. The name Medicine Bow is of Indian derivation, but how it came to be applied to the mountains from which the town takes its name is not certainly known. It is known, however, that some of the tribes annually visited the mountains that now bear this name to procure a certain kind of wood for their bows. In Indian talk anything that serves its purpose well is "good medicine," and according to reports the mountains and streams where this timber was found became known as places where "good-medicine bows" were obtained.

Source: Guidebook of the Western United States   

 

Other Names: 

 

Alternative Spellings:

 

History:

 

Stories:

 

Maps:

1:24000 Quadrangle: Medicine Bow Peak

 

Newspapers:

 

More Information:

Medicine Bow National Forest

http://www.fs.fed.us/r2/mbr/

 

Pictures: